COREM

COREM

Share

COREM represents all the Ethnic Ministries of the United Church of Christ .

06/11/2026

https://www.facebook.com/share/p/18tZQUdA5E/?mibextid=wwXIfr

Please join our hybrid eventπŸ™πŸ½

06/11/2026

πŸ–ŠοΈ SIGN THE PETITION: https://buff.ly/rIOpFyq

It is Pride Month. And FCC Chair Brendan Carr wants TV ratings to label shows that include transgender and nonbinary characters as if they are dangerous content. Trans people are our neighbors and our fellow congregants. More than 5 million children in this country have LGBTQ+ parents. They are not a danger to anyone.

06/11/2026

πŸ’šπŸ–€β€οΈ Join us for the 2026 Juneteenth Commemoration: In Troubling Times, Consult the Ancestors!

Juneteenth is a sacred day of remembrance and hopeβ€”a celebration of freedom, resilience, and the ongoing journey toward justice. Today, we honor the legacy of those who fought for liberation and the ancestors who guide us still.

In these challenging times, the Racial Justice Ministries of the United Church of Christ invite you to gather in prophetic remembrance. Let us draw wisdom from the prophets of scripture and the modern-day leaders who inspire us to resist injustice and nurture a just world for all.

πŸ—“οΈ Thursday, June 18th | 3:30 PM Eastern
✨ Featuring Rev. Dr. Velda Love, Rev. Dr. Cheryl Lindsay, and Rev. Trayce Potter

πŸ‘‰πŸΎ Register to join us: https://ow.ly/LJfQ50Z8VnH


Sermon Seeds (United Church of Christ)

06/11/2026

Every morning, Linda Brown watched the white children in her neighborhood walk to Sumner Elementary School.
It was four blocks away. A short walk through a familiar neighborhood. The kind of school that should have simply been her school β€” the one closest to her home, the one her friends attended, the one that made obvious geographical sense for a third-grader in Topeka, Kansas.
Instead, Linda walked to a bus stop and rode across town to Monroe Elementary β€” the school designated for Black children. The bus ride was long. The school was far. And every day, the children she played with in her mixed neighborhood disappeared in one direction while she went in another.
"We lived in a mixed neighborhood," she later recalled, "but when school time came I would have to take the school bus and go clear across town and the White children I played with would go to this other school."
She was eight years old, and she already knew something was wrong. She just didn't have the words for it yet.
Her father Oliver Brown had the words.
In 1951, he walked to Sumner Elementary with Linda and tried to enroll her. The school turned them away. A child who lived four blocks from the school could not attend it because she was Black β€” because in 1951, the law of the land held that "separate but equal" facilities were constitutional, and that separating children by race in schools was simply the way things were.
The NAACP's legal division saw something different. They saw a case.
Linda's family became one of five families from across the country whose cases were consolidated and brought before the Supreme Court together. The case carried her name β€” Brown v. Board of Education β€” and on May 17, 1954, the nine justices of the United States Supreme Court issued a unanimous ruling.
"Separate but equal" was unconstitutional.
"Segregation of White and colored children in public schools has a detrimental effect," the justices wrote. "To separate them from others of similar age and qualifications solely because of their race generates a feeling of inferiority as to their status in the community that may affect their hearts and minds in a way unlikely ever to be undone."
A feeling of inferiority.
The Supreme Court had looked at American education and recognized something that an eight-year-old girl in Topeka had already understood intuitively from the school bus window β€” that the message sent to a child by telling her she cannot attend the school four blocks from her home is not a neutral administrative decision. It is a statement about her worth.
The unanimous ruling overturned Plessy v. Ferguson, the 1896 decision that had enshrined "separate but equal" as constitutional law for 58 years. It was one of the most significant legal decisions in American history β€” a turning point not just for education but for the entire Civil Rights Movement that would follow.
Linda Brown grew up to become a teacher and educational consultant. She spent her adult life working on school integration and equal education β€” continuing the fight that had begun with her father walking her to a school four blocks away.
"Looking back on Brown v. Board of Education," she said in an interview, "it has made an impact in all facets of life for minorities throughout the land. I really think of it in terms of what it has done for our young people, in taking away that feeling of second-class citizenship."
She was born on this day in 1943.
She passed away in 2018.
In between, she gave her name β€” without ever choosing to β€” to the case that told every child in America that the school four blocks away was theirs too.

Want your establishment to be the top-listed Arts & Entertainment in Washington D.C.?
Click here to claim your Sponsored Listing.

Category

Telephone

Website

Address


Washington D.C., DC