If you are in Chicago’s Loop, stop by the First United Methodist Church at the Chicago Temple and check out a sculpture based upon a cross that was burned on the lawn of Tougaloo College in Jackson, Mississippi in the autumn of 1963. The students were being encouraged by Ed King, the campus minister to go into the city and to try and desegregate the churches on Sunday morning.

That not only led to the arrests of the students, but also led to the KKK burning a cross on the college lawn. Ed King kept the cross and gave it to the United Methodist Church who were in the process of trying to desegregate the denomination nationally. So, this cross became the symbol for the desegregation of the United Methodist Church in the 1960’s.

Eventually, the cross was taken to Pittsburgh at the general conference and walked around the conference hall.  It became a rallying point. Later, the cross was given to Gerald Forshe, a pastor in Chicago, who brought home.  He took it to Jack Kearney who was a very well regarded sculptor in town.

Kearney took that charred wooden cross, encased it in a kind of skin of metal, so that it wouldnt disintegrate. On it, he placed the obviously African American, distressed, truncated Christ. And so Jerry has had this sculpture for over 40 years in his own possession.

But when Jerry was very ill last spring he wanted to make sure that First United Methodist Church at the Chicago Temple received it and put on public display. The cross is a gift to the church that we can make available to people who visit and want to know the story. This cross not only referrers back to 1963, but it, holds a great deal of power for us today.

This summer, First United Methodist Church at the Chicago Temple had a guest who came to worship. He was a retired university administrator from Mississippi. He saw the figure on the cross and immediately said, “That is James Chaney.” James Chaney was one of the three young men who were murdered as they tried to register voters in Mississippi in 1963.  Chaney was the only African American among the three. And so at least for that person, he saw in this figure, that historical moment.

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Comments

2 responses to “Honoring MLK, KKK Cross Sculpture at Chicago Temple”

  1. James Cheney Avatar
    James Cheney

    The civil rights worker who was murdered in 1963 was named James Chaney, not James Cheney. Believe me, I know.

  2. Lydia Bailey Brown Avatar
    Lydia Bailey Brown

    Really meaningful. This storytelling is important. Thanks Tim!

    I was born in Jackson, Mississippi in the fall of 1963. This story is part of my history in a very important way.

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