Thank you soooooo much, Tim, for this interview with Pastor Otis! I am a white woman who left her white evangelical church in 2003 and became a member of a Black Pentecostal church. I've been in this same Black church for nearly 22 years, and I've never looked back. Thank you, Pastor Otis Moss, for your incredible stories. I couldn't stop nodding my head. Yes! Yes!❤❤❤❤
@babujai111 күн бұрын
Completely riveting for the whole 1.5 hours. This was amazing and a perfect alternative to the events in DC today. Thank you!
@therealgodthetruth94306 күн бұрын
All Americans need to know this history. I have been trying to get people to hear this for years. When I get a person to sit down and listen.
@HopeHasWarriors12 күн бұрын
This is such a great thing to be talking about today. Thank you Tim, and thank you Rev. Moss III!
@eutonagillem98509 күн бұрын
OMG.!. My spirit is vibrating. This, THIS is the kind of teaching humanity is so desperately needing. Please SHARE the LOVE.!. Ps: I shared with 5 🥰
@sparkasaurusdonna12 күн бұрын
Thank you for sharing these important people with us. Like you, I was raised in White Evangelical culture, so I'm having to learn a lot that was left out of my life.
@margerybritton79311 күн бұрын
I was raised in a Baptist Church in the city. I was raised in a humble church that was diverse (before we knew what diversity meant). My father was a white elder and my mother a deacon. We had African American leaders as well. This was in the 1960s. The church ministered to many children in the community. The pastor would wake up early and drive around and pick children up. My parents and the other elders just did the gospel and lived out the teaching of Christ. I am so thankful for this gift given to me early in life to see all people who were created in Gods image and valuable and precious in God’s sight.
@mariaposton890510 күн бұрын
I absolutely loved this conversation. It started to warm my heart towards the Christian faith again.
@Lucey052011 күн бұрын
As someone who went to Robert Smalls Middle School for 3 years in Beaufort,South Carolina I've never heard his story told with such passion. Thank you so much. It can be so tough to remember our beautiful history when I live in a town full of trump flags. This interview is just what I needed today!!
@miriama.percell5728 күн бұрын
I love Beaufort SC, but can feel the oppression still at its root. I visit my God sister quarterly. I’d like to know why there is very little black businesses in this city. Is it intentional, or do the citizens not desire to bring more black value to the city. There is so much history and Art and it draws me near. What can be done to raise the consciousness and energize the community to build more culture there?
@Lucey05207 күн бұрын
@miriama.percell572 oh I can't think of any tbh but I'm not surprised by it either. Sadly
@jeanettecrosier88936 күн бұрын
I moved to a town like you described but I'm from a predominantly Black city. I'm so blessed that we were taught history which included Black History. But, as I became an adult, my education did not stop. We can't wait for others to educate us, WE MUST GO GET IT THEN SHARE IT WITH FAMILY AND FRIENDS. Especially our children because it is eliminated from schools in certain states. We pray this doesn't happen in all states. 🙏🙏Amen. 💕🌹🎯💯✨️💥👀🔥👑🎊
@teresaspish675611 күн бұрын
I haven't been able to watch any news or politics today but this was the video my spirit needed. Thank you.
@angiem638311 күн бұрын
💜Thank you Rev. Dr. Otis Moss iii & Tim for getting together & having this wide-ranging convo. You've both given me so much to think about. This discussion would be wonderful any day, it was particularly insightful & cogent on the day u are putting it out. Sharing.
@cjanderson237111 күн бұрын
Thank you Pastor Otis! I was blown away by this interview. So very needed 😭❤️
@narcole11 күн бұрын
Thank you so much Tim and Pastor Otis for holding this conversation. The timing couldn't be more perfect and necessary. I hope many people get to see this.
@eulaliabradley49915 күн бұрын
If you share it they will😊
@mikecarter503410 күн бұрын
Thank you so much Tim and Rev Otis!!! I really want to hear so much more from Rev Otis Moss III
@rebagail498911 күн бұрын
This is such an AMAZING conversation! Thank you so much, Tim and Rev. Moss!
@jasonfawks771311 күн бұрын
Thank you for this and giving hope on this troubling day. God bless!
@Wrathstein12 күн бұрын
Loving the conversation. Everyone needs to know not only their history but the history of the world. Not only their own beliefs and religion but the beliefs and religion of others as well. Oh how true is History Repeats itself, again and again.
@Z10C9 күн бұрын
These conversations are SO important. Thank you both for what you do!!!
@russelltate370311 күн бұрын
Thanks to both of you for a "rabbit hole" that must be explored around the "round table". Thank you for introducing me to looking through the lens of love/justice. Thanks again.
@k.g.williams15805 күн бұрын
What a wonderful and blessed interview! I grew up in the Jim Crow era and experience some of what Rev. Otis Moss talked about. Thank you both for sharing this with us. I have shared it with many and will continue to share it with others. May the blessings of the Lord cover and keep you strong as you speak Truth to the nation.
@BobBarron11 күн бұрын
What an amazing and insightful conversation. I especially enjoyed the jazz metaphors from Rev. Otis Moss III. Great job, Tim!
@ChanaMcNana11 күн бұрын
Thank you for another insightful and educational interview! Absolutely wonderful!!
@anthonyyoung870311 күн бұрын
Thanks so much for the wisdom!!
@Fashionchik2411 күн бұрын
Thank you for this immensely important conversation! Everyone needs to watch this.
@annvanhemert269411 күн бұрын
Thank you, Tim! I'm near the end and this is the most uplifting and encouraging (to my faith) interview that I've seen.
@CaptivatedPhoto111 күн бұрын
Thank you for this very important discussion. I grew up white evangelical and my parents are SO resistant to discuss even the smallest parts of these issues. I have slowly been educating myself and am hoping to do better.
@eulaliabradley49915 күн бұрын
God bless your journey 💜
@evelynmoss393910 күн бұрын
Thank you such a beautiful dialog. It was very insightfulness. Once again thank Rev. Dr. Otis Moss and Tim.
@hapennysparrow11 күн бұрын
Beautiful dialogue. It so resonated with my spirit. I loved the final admonition to not die of your enemy's disease. This is a long work and we must press on, " one brick at a time."
@sylviaarchuleta302710 күн бұрын
This is a great tribute and and truthful message of the past and the present and future. The Holy Ghost who moved our sister Fanny in the Mississippi jail can help us change this world!❤. Thank you Pastor Otis and Tim.
@arthurcook331711 күн бұрын
Thank you Tim and Dr. Otis Moss for such an awesome and though provoking conversation. A small tidbit, I recently started attending a UCC out here in Colorado and I love it.
@t.morrison44006 күн бұрын
I believe these self-proclaimed “Christian”nationalist who desire to dominate others clearly lack understanding who Jesus IS, or they don’t care. They can be compared to the Pharisees and scribes (religious) in my King James translation of the Bible. A white male once said to me that they don’t care about righteousness. We once worked in the same office of a private business. I wasn’t shocked but surprised he had the audacity to admit it. He wasn’t there long after that! So, I believe certain group(s), and or individuals of ppl want what they want no matter the cost. I truly believe that there is another “Day of Reckoning” coming to the U.S. Visit or revisit pre-Civil War historical accounts. A nation divided canNOT stand! We are All in this together😐
@norenemanning468610 күн бұрын
Wow! Thank u both so much. I’m listening on 1/21/25. This dialogue has blessed my heart and I am speechless. Thank you! Thank you! 🙏🏽
@brianhuggins30444 күн бұрын
GOD IS WITH US AND LOVE IS ON OUR SIDE ❤️💙🕊️✝️
@fawaka500610 күн бұрын
Wow! This was a privilege to listen and Watch! Thank you! Dr. Moss is already a legend!
@holyhillfilms5 күн бұрын
Wow! This was monumental. I think it should be required viewing for everyone and very grateful this appeared on my feed. Thank you Dr. Moss, III and Host Tim! Dr. Moss is as brilliant as his father, Dr. Otis Moss, Jr. one of Georgia's greatest theologians and leaders who has impacted the world.
@Quettasbedhead10 күн бұрын
Great conversation and great story at the end moved me to tears
@ciararyan93708 күн бұрын
This is the best thing I’ve listened to all week! Thank you, Tim and Reverend Moss. 🩷
@Snazzy_Science_Labz11 күн бұрын
MORE LIKE THIS!!! LOVE THE NEW PERSPECTIVE!!! WE NEED THIS!!!
@LikeMadCops11 күн бұрын
What a powerful conversation.
@lilliananderson85386 күн бұрын
Otis Moss ||| is so much like his dad who was before his time. He was and still is a positive force in the Cleveland area and way beyond! His son has picked up the banner and carrying on a great legacy. Wow! I feel blessed to tune into this segment today. Thank you
@andreatucker63165 күн бұрын
I love the wealth of knowledge shared here today. Thank you for the interview, and thank you Dr. Rev. Moss.
@joethorne61988 күн бұрын
I enjoyed this discussion and pray for your continued work/success. Peace and blessings!
@GiannaWright-f8t3 күн бұрын
Thank you for this wonderful interview. My husband and I look at Dr. Moss every Sunday. I thank God for him and his father because his dad blessed us when he spoke at my church in Atlanta as I was growing up. Thank you for your son who continues to bless us. This interview was powerful and touched my spirit.
@emmadear327611 күн бұрын
Incredible conversation and so important.
@lexingtonwalker11748 күн бұрын
Good job, gentlemen!!! I really enjoyed this conversation.
@donesecarr35705 күн бұрын
This was amazing. Thank you❤
@dorothyjones167210 күн бұрын
This is amazing! Thank you my brothers.
@FaynettaBrowm6 күн бұрын
Thank you pastor Otis for the truth it means a lot to me I did not know these facts
@Michael-ir8tl6 күн бұрын
THANK-YOU GENTAMAN AND GOD BLESS YOU.😮❤❤❤❤
@ryguy566 күн бұрын
wow, this was one of the most powerful videos i’ve ever stumbled across!! i was raised agnostic & grew up marginalized, so my view of organized religion is pretty nuanced lol. i’m amazed i agree with everything discussed, & i can’t wait to look into it more. this video is a huge blessing
@bibigems12 күн бұрын
This is so great. Thank you Tim Whitaker.
@debrabenda52104 күн бұрын
This is such an extraordinary conversation! Bravo for snagging an interview with Rev. Dr. Moss. More of this, please and thank you! ❤ I’ve known for a while that growing in my Christian faith requires me to go back to church. But the Christian Nationalists seem to have infiltrated many churches, including pastors, that I won’t go there. I’d love to go to a Black church, but I feel like they need their own spaces. I would feel like I would be invading a sacred space that is theirs. I guess I will need to get up the courage to ask. Because Rev. Dr. Moss really moved me and opened my eyes to things I didn’t realize.
@kellywatkins5916 күн бұрын
This was a beautiful conversation!
@nancywall2634 күн бұрын
This was such a good history lesson. Thank you both for sharing this knowledge about how we got here.
@amypattie700411 күн бұрын
The conversation about “you cannot be white and Christian” cut me to the heart. I identify as a white Australian. The three ancestors I know about who immigrated here come from Ireland, England, and America. Thinking of myself as Irish, English, European, it gives me a sense of rejection. I have none of that heritage, and much of the heritage I don’t want. I see “white” as a blank slate. There’s an emptiness in it. I don’t know now many Australians you know, but there’s a massive generational rejection, because that is our heritage - the rejects sent away from a country that didn’t want them. Saying “you cannot be Christian and white” is saying “you cannot cling onto emptiness because you are not brave enough to face the wounds of rejection and fully follow Christ”.
@amypattie700411 күн бұрын
I’d also like to add that Jesus and the Disinherited is about $40 in Australia! Phew! Keen to read it, I am sure i shall find a way ❤
@charlotteholland836410 күн бұрын
It's ALSO putting WHITE above everything else... it's a form of idolatry.
@unchartedwithtorrie10 күн бұрын
This was such a beautiful conversation!
@kigaiter40917 күн бұрын
SHARE THIS. Wow! This conversation supports the reason WHY WE MUST KNOW OUR HISTORY. It is powerful a call to action! Otis MossIII
@Amethystar9 күн бұрын
I learned a lot from this! I knew of some of these pieces of history, but putting them into context was enlightening. I don't often share videos with friends and family, but I will be sharing this.
@zakiasimpson892811 күн бұрын
Wow learned a lot, this needs to be a high school course
@t.morrison44006 күн бұрын
Not in the current public schools…we 🤷🏽♀️need our own schools back via our places of worship, not on Sunday, but an evening during the weekday, or Saturday. Just a thought🤔
@beryllofland8725 күн бұрын
I love this conversation.
@lizgreer688811 күн бұрын
Marlborough, MA was known as a strong abolitionist town. It was a large financial backer to John Brown. When the Marlborough Union soldiers made it to Harper's Ferry in the Civil War, they took the bell he rang. They hid it in a hole in a sympathizers backyard and at the end of the war they returned and brought the bell to Marlborough for safe keeping. In the 1960s with my Dad as the commander, the Marlborough American Legion and VFW fundraised and built a tower for the bell. Its inscription says "so we may never forget the dignity of every human and our obligation to uphold it." Every few years the state of Maryland sues the city of Marlborough for the bell. It still stands in the tower on Marlborough common.
@nancywall2634 күн бұрын
Rev. Otis you have a Brilliant mind to disseminate all this information 🙌🏽
@jstengren12 күн бұрын
Another banger from the crew! Such a great conversation
@ariaanneprice5 күн бұрын
This was an awe inspiring interview thank you so much
@kkietzerow5 күн бұрын
Wonderful interview!
@BrandonMcCraeКүн бұрын
Incredible conversation!
@FernOwens-ng7vg9 күн бұрын
I am a black Christ follower who has spent most of my life in white majority churches, I left church in 2020 and I am now returning to a white majority church. This was a wonderful instructive and uplifting talk. In Christ alone!
@helenr430011 күн бұрын
Amazing beyond my words
@umiiyabode7 күн бұрын
I've had "Jesus and the Disinherited" for years, and JUST found Cole Arthur Riley and bought "Black Liturgies"! Excellent conversation!
@myrarice139511 күн бұрын
Great conversation!
@BobBarron11 күн бұрын
Thanks!
@laurenrobinson87149 күн бұрын
Excellent discussion! Thank you.
@anafigueira987312 күн бұрын
Thank you so much Tim 🫐 ☕️
@b.sealemons12 күн бұрын
Great episode.
@Ronald-cb2np7 күн бұрын
I, live few blocks from Trinity Baptist Church and attend,he,s is great to listen to and learn
@adreanalangston37712 күн бұрын
It is NOT Trinity Baptist. It is Trinity Chicago United Church of Christ
@benjamincrabtree310212 күн бұрын
Loving this conversation!!!
@laurenrobinson87148 күн бұрын
Tim, please have a pt 2, 3, 4... with Rev. Otis Moss III.
@DeSeanPower202510 күн бұрын
Great Documentary
@benjaminfraser253511 күн бұрын
Have you ever been to the Church of the Advocate in North Philly? That church opened my eyes to African American Christian history and the beautiful artwork showing the Exodus of Moses, but painted in the African American interpretation of freedom from slavery by following the Underground Railroad to freedom in Canada! It is amazing to experience the artwork and getting a tour by a church elder there will open your eyes!
@Livelifeonpurpose642611 күн бұрын
My daughter is married to a white man and has two biracial children and one black daughter they attend a white church she has lost all her connection to the black church and her blackness and that mean her children will miss out embodying in the black faith she was taught it’s like she turns away from the teachings of God like having empathy for the down trodded We always have a hard conversation it’s exhausting but I continue to exercise my faith that she would come back to the teachings she grew up with but I stand on Faith she will find her way back
@thomassandoval802511 күн бұрын
Sounds like you're more focused on race than on Christ
@jeanettecrosier88936 күн бұрын
Jesus: Healthcare 4 all, NO deductible‼️Does she need to be healed? Hallelujah, Jesus. 💕🎯💯✨️💥👀🤭
@dorisriley64475 күн бұрын
Isaiah 10:1-4 Woe to those who make unjust laws, to those who issue oppressive decrees, 2 to deprive the poor of their rights and withhold justice from the oppressed of my people, making widows their prey and robbing the fatherless. 3 What will you do on the day of reckoning, when disaster comes from afar? To whom will you run for help? Where will you leave your riches? 4 Nothing will remain but to cringe among the captives or fall among the slain. Yet for all this, his anger is not turned away, his hand is still upraised. Those MAGA folks better be careful 🙏
@onenessguy859 күн бұрын
awesome discussion. I learned a lot.
@lloydfrancis91499 күн бұрын
Bingo!!! I couldn't articulate it well as a Christian from London England Europe now living in Dallas Texas as a minority myself I couldn't put a finger on something was wrong with American Christianity. So this conversation is very good. I had to dig deep to go back to orthodox Christianity which started in the middle East established Europe as a small sect, Greek orthodox, Ethiopian orthodox, the Catholic universal Roman church in Europe reformed by a German priest because of the 95 theses leading to sola scriptura and ex communication because of corruption within Catholicism indulgences all the way to the Anglican church in England which led to the puritans leaving and sailing to Massachusetts usa and the calvinist, then the Baptist, charismatic Catholics, Presbyterian, then the Mormon church, Jehovah's witnesses and the black Southern church, then the word of faith movement, then the evangelicals, now the Maga evangelicals somewhere the message of Jesus Christ is lost the love and compassion the americanized version of the gospel. This is very good conversation. Jesus came to establish a Kingdom ( kings Dominion over territory) not a religion. And definitely not a racist movement
@lauramurray827611 күн бұрын
❤ Amazing!
@christophercotton904811 күн бұрын
Evil has assumed residence in the People's house.
@gacchan11 күн бұрын
amazing
@roster0929 күн бұрын
50:24 I had to watch Donald Trump inaugurated again on my birthday- that also happened to fall on MLK this year, while sick attempting to read for law school classes- and thought to myself this exact same thought but even further. Trump is not only the fruit of what was sown at the foundation of this country but also he embodies the principality and territorial spirits of this country.
@elindioedwards70419 күн бұрын
Has it ever occurred to you that Trump is maybe a response to laxed border policies that allowed for millions to cross into the US and, in turn, take resources away from US citizens? That maybe it is a response to DEI policy that is now 'coming home to roost' in California reference out of control fires? And that it is also a response to the most inept presidential candidate who spent well over 1 billion dollars in campaign expenses and still lost by significant margins despite favorable treatment by a legacy media and support by Hollywood and political elites? If the answer is 'No' to all these questions, then just remember that those who don't learn from history are doomed to repeat it.
@DrLeaders11 күн бұрын
Woah. Production quality just took a big bump up.
@marshatacaradine94597 күн бұрын
AJ Brown was reading INNER EXCELLENCE by Jim Murphy and I ask where did he get this from?
@brianhuggins30444 күн бұрын
JESUS MEANS FOLLOW ME❤
@Padmak249711 күн бұрын
The sacred power of the Holy Spirit & the choir singing chased the unholy disruptors from Kansas City lol😂
@BoboftheOldeWays12 күн бұрын
Wonderful conversation! But I have to call you out here, Tim. You failed to introduce Otis to 7-Eleven blueberry coffee.
@nealstepКүн бұрын
Tim, I could have given you some tips when you went to Pastor's church, even though you know I spent years in white evangelical spaces, I have some black church experience lol
@brianhuggins30444 күн бұрын
CHRISTIANITY MEANS ALL ARE WELCOME
@KU-nu4vn11 күн бұрын
latinos ,immigrants, and blacks, we should be aware ⚠️
@DorisFiles-t2s6 күн бұрын
Wonderful program,thanks for sharing
@Livelifeonpurpose642611 күн бұрын
My daughter is married to a white man and has two biracial children and one black daughter they attend a white church she has lost all her connection to the black church and her blackness and that mean her children will miss out embodying in the black faith she was taught it’s like she turns away from the teachings of God like having empathy for the down trodded We always have a hard conversation it’s exhausting but I continue to exercise my faith that she would come back to the teachings she grew up on
@ambientbeauty60411 күн бұрын
Logical Logos Love
@berts55811 күн бұрын
Yeah they've co-opted Ayn Rand as an atheist prophet, and while Jewish philosophies are definitely part and parcel of Christianity only Christian nationalists include this in the scriptures, and as a Jewish Canadian I've always found this hilarious but the way that ideology is scurrying over the Border it's starting to be significantly less funny. The cognitive dissidence of believing the government giving a company money is totally not socialism but you help a poor person and that's evil!
@Lesterfaye8111 күн бұрын
Pastor Otis, they sang down Westboro Baptist?!?!? That's better than the patriot guard revving their cycle engines.... (Our choir isn't big enough for that, but that sounds fun)
@sethgriffi7 күн бұрын
There was no such thing as enslaved Africans. There were indigenous black peoples in this country before the colonial rule.
@KU-nu4vn11 күн бұрын
tha biggest cancer is i the apostasy nside so many churches that's is the end of times 2 tesalonieses 2:3-10 ---mathew 24:4