Don’t Walk With the Furious: A Faith Reflection on Racism

Don’t Walk With the Furious: A Faith Reflection on Racism

“Make no friendship with an angry man; and with a furious man thou shalt not go: Lest thou learn his ways, and get a snare to thy soul.”
Proverbs 22:24–25 (KJV)

Don’t Walk With the Furious: A Faith Reflection on Racism

Scripture teaches us that anger and violence are contagious. When we walk too closely with those who thrive on fury, we risk learning their ways. Soon their actions become our habits, their justifications become our excuses, and their sins become snares to our souls.

Racism is one of the clearest modern examples of this truth. At its core, racism is violence—against God’s creation, against human dignity, against the commandment to love our neighbor. Those who embrace racism live as the “furious man” described in Proverbs. They wound, divide, and stir anger. And anyone who chooses to walk with them—even silently—risks being caught in the same destructive path.

What This Means for Us Today

  • Silence can become agreement. When we excuse or ignore racism, we walk alongside fury.
  • Children learn from our steps. If they see us tolerate racism, they too may “learn his ways.”
  • Faith calls us higher. To walk with Christ is to walk away from violent men and violent systems.

A Call to Action

This scripture is not only about who we call “friend,” but about what we choose to normalize in our lives. God calls us to break step with those who live in fury and instead walk in love, justice, and truth. Refusing to partner with racism is not political—it is deeply biblical.

Reflection Prayer

Lord, search my heart and remove any way in me that walks with anger or violence. Give me courage to refuse fellowship with racism in all its forms. Help me to guide the next generation into Your paths of love, justice, and peace.

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