Interview: Eric Mason Talks Redeeming ‘Wokeness’ and Abandoning ‘Evangelicalism’

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Dr. Eric Mason is the founder and pastor of Epiphany Fellowship. He is the recipient of multiple earned degrees, including a B.S. in Psychology from Bowie State University, a Master of Theology from Dallas Theological Seminary, and a Ph.D. from Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary. He is the founder and president of Thriving, an urban resource organization committed to developing leaders for ministry in the urban context. He is the author of four books, the most recent of which is Woke Church: An Urgent Call for Christians in America to Confront Racism and Injustice.

This is part one of Faithfully Magazine’s interview with Mason, conducted by phone. It has been edited and condensed for clarity.

Let’s begin with a little background information. Tell us a bit about how you came to saving faith in Jesus and what called you to pastoral ministry.

I grew up in Washington, D.C. I grew up in the church, yet didn’t notice the call of the gospel. It wasn’t that the church didn’t preach it; it’s just I didn’t notice it. But it did, because it was an extremely liturgical church, a United Methodist Church. You heard the gospel and the historical Christian faith, doctrine, and everything. So, once I went to college, I went to a campus ministry outreach that had church service there on Sunday mornings. And I ended up just stumbling into one and ended up hearing the gospel clearly for the first time and ended up placing my faith in the finished work of Christ on the cross and His resurrection and propitiation for my sins. That’s how I came to faith. But, I wasn’t in a local church and wasn’t getting discipled when I was in college. But, I ended up getting discipled by a young man to get into church, and once I started dating who would be my wife, I started going to that church and sensed a strong call to ministry.

I would preach on the campus all the time, but I didn’t call it “preaching.” I just called it “being a witness.” I would stand in the Student Union and talk to anybody, answer any question. And I was a year to year and a half saved, but I would stand in there and proclaim the gospel, talk to people about the gospel, and by God’s grace, many people came to faith. About March of the Spring of my sophomore year, I sensed a strong urge that I couldn’t shake of going into ministry. I read Jeremiah chapter 1 verses 4 through 10 and it seemed like the words jumped off the page to me and that ministry was exactly what I was supposed to be doing as a vocation.

You and your church are a part of the Acts 29 Network. How did you originally get connected to this network? I know that Acts 29 has made steps toward racial justice and diversity conversations. Could you provide some insight about that?

I ended up in the network prior to launching a church around 2004. I was at Fellowship Associates at Fellowship Bible Church in Little Rock going through their residency program, and in that program a couple of the guys in the network were going through the Acts 29 process. I didn’t know many church planting networks out there, and I ended up reaching out to Acts 29 because, you know, as a church planting guy, you’re looking for support and ways to learn how to get camaraderie to understanding the nature of church planting. Because back then, church planting wasn’t as big as it is now. Church planting is huge now. It was just beginning to buzz a little bit, and I mean particularly inner city church planting and urban church planting was not at all on anybody’s radar. So, it really wasn’t as big of a deal as it is now.

The post Interview: Eric Mason Talks Redeeming 'Wokeness' and Abandoning 'Evangelicalism' appears on Faithfully Magazine.

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