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Episcopal Church leaders launch independent racial justice coalition

April 17, 2024
Office of Public Affairs
Presiding Bishop Michael Curry and House of Deputies President Julia Ayala Harris signed the incorporating documents at St. Ambrose Episcopal Church in Raleigh, North Carolina.

Earlier today, Presiding Bishop Michael Curry and President of the House of Deputies Julia Ayala Harris signed the incorporating legal documents required to make the Episcopal Coalition for Racial Equity and Justice an official independent New York nonprofit corporation.

This action realizes a vision started more than three years ago by the church’s then-presiding officers to address the harms of white supremacy and foster a churchwide culture of truth-telling, reckoning, and healing in pursuit of racial justice.

“While today’s news is in one sense legal and administrative, there is tremendous spiritual depth to what we have achieved these past years in our commitment to becoming the Beloved Community envisioned by Jesus of Nazareth,” Curry said. “We are called to the hard and holy work of love, and I cannot wait to see how the Episcopal Coalition for Racial Equity and Justice will carry this work into a sustainable, creative future.” 

In 2022, the working group tasked with bringing this vision into reality sent a report with recommendations to the 80th General Convention. One of the resulting resolutions called for the creation of the coalition—a unique, extra-ecclesial body designed to organize and network with agility across churchwide structures. Since then, a constituting group has been at work to identify the organizational, canonical, and legal pathways to fully establish the coalition.  

“The establishment of this coalition is a historic step forward in our church’s ongoing work to dismantle systemic racism and build a more just and equitable future for all God’s children.” Ayala Harris said. “While there is still much work ahead of us, today’s announcement marks a significant milestone in our journey toward racial justice. Let us move forward with courage, compassion, and a steadfast commitment to creating a church and a world where all people are valued and loved.”

The coalition, which is designed to work alongside and in collaboration with existing racial justice programs in the church, will receive some of its annual funding from the income of 10% of the unrestricted endowment of the Domestic and Foreign Missionary Society. To ensure ongoing funding of the coalition from the church’s resources in future years, Curry and Ayala Harris plan to propose a rare joint resolution to the 81st General Convention that would include the current funding mechanism in the church’s canons.

“The Episcopal Coalition will breathe new life into the church,” said Ryan Kusumoto, who served as chair of the coalition’s constituting group. “It will serve as a central point for the work of racial justice. Our next step is to bring individuals and groups together in this crucial mission and ministry.”

Ian Douglas, retired bishop of Connecticut and a member of both the original presiding officers’ working group and the constituting group, said, “While the 80th General Convention had already established the coalition, the constituting group had to do the detail work of bringing the dream to fruition. Our time has been blessed by the leading of the Holy Spirit, and I am excited to see how we will move forward to dismantle racism and white supremacy in service to God’s mission of restoration and reconciliation.”

To learn more about the coalition and to become involved, please visit its website.