VIDEOS

Why Is White Jesus So Problematic?
(Dr. Michael Waters)
Dr. Michael Waters highlights how the image of a white Jesus is a tool of colonization and white supremacy. It distorts history, portraying divinity through a European lens while erasing Jesus' true identity as a brown-skinned Middle Eastern man.
 
White Jesus justifies systems of racial hierarchy and disconnects Black and Brown people from a faith that was never meant to oppress them. Reclaiming the true image of Christ isn’t just about race—it’s about truth, liberation, and spiritual healing.

White Jesus in Ghana
In many churches across Ghana, images of a European-looking Jesus still hang on walls—remnants of colonial-era Christianity. These depictions, often accepted without question, reflect how deeply Western influence reshaped African spiritual spaces.
 
But beneath the surface, more Ghanaians are starting to question: Why does our Savior not look like us? Why do we still worship through the lens of those who once enslaved and colonized us?
 
The presence of White Jesus in Ghana is more than a picture—it’s a symbol of spiritual colonization. Replacing that image with a truer reflection of Christ is part of a larger movement to decolonize faith and reclaim Christianity as something African, ancestral, and liberating.
PART 1
Africa in the Bible:
The Myth of a Cursed Race

PART 2
Africa in the Bible:
Has The Curse Been Misunderstood?

PART 3
Africa in the Bible:
The Myth of a Cursed Race

Keneth Copeland says the devil is a Black man
The dangerous theology of white supremacy in the church
Televangelist Kenneth Copeland has been widely criticized for past sermons and imagery where the devil is described or portrayed with Black features. While he may not have said the exact words “the devil is a Black man,” his teachings and symbolic depictions have contributed to a dangerous and racist theology that links Blackness with evil and whiteness with purity.
 
This kind of imagery is not new. For centuries, Eurocentric Christianity has demonized Blackness—literally. Paintings, sermons, and films have subtly (and sometimes blatantly) portrayed dark skin as a mark of sin, while whiteness is equated with holiness. It’s spiritual violence disguised as gospel.


Denzel Washington Explains The Hidden Truths About Black People In The Book Of Jubillees

Forbidden Knowledge: Denzel Washington Why the Ethiopian Bible Was Banned! What Connection With Black People

