- Baptist Press - https://www.baptistpress.com -

Mississippi voters adopt ‘In God We Trust’ flag free of Confederate emblem

[1]

JACKSON, Miss. (BP) – Mississippi Baptist Convention Board (MBCB) leader Shawn Parker is applauding Tuesday’s adoption of a new state flag that honors God and notably lacks the Confederate battle emblem.

Nearly 72 percent of Mississippi voters approved the new flag design, according to unofficial results with 93 percent of precincts reporting. Voters approved a red, white, blue and gold design featuring a white magnolia, the state flower, and the words “In God We Trust.”

“We believe that the new flag design is an accurate reflection of Mississippi’s focus on faith and family, and we also think that it is a better representation of the entire state,” said Parker, MBCB executive director and treasurer.

The MBCB was among many Mississippians advocating for a new flag when it voted in June to ask the Mississippi Legislature to retire the 1894 flag that included the Confederate emblem and to replace it with a more inclusive design.

“We have gotten negative feedback from Mississippians in general, but overall the response that we’ve received has been positive, especially from our churches,” Parker said.

Mississippi was the final state to include the Confederate emblem on its flag, the lone holdout since Georgia redesigned its flag in 2003.

[2]

The vote is the near final step in the state legislature’s move to drop the design that included the Confederate battle symbol. The symbol is considered divisive in Mississippi, where 38 percent of the population is Black, the highest percentage of any state in the nation.

In the next procedural step, the Mississippi Legislature must vote in its 2021 legislative session, which begins in January to enact the new design into law.

The new design was recommended by the six-member Commission to Redesign the Mississippi State Flag and combined the elements of six designs [3] among nearly 3,000 submitted by the public, the Associated Press reported. The winning design includes elements recommended by four Mississippians and a resident each from San Francisco and Massachusetts, according to the AP.

In asking the Legislature [4] in June to discontinue the old design, Parker read a statement signed by Mississippi Baptist Convention President Ken Hester; Jim Futral, MBCB executive director-treasurer emeritus; Kenny Digby, executive director-treasurer of the Christian Action Commission, the full 15-member MBCB executive committee, and all living former Mississippi Baptist Convention presidents, spanning 1984-2019.

“Our position on this is motivated by our understanding of the teaching of Jesus Christ,” Parker said in June, referencing the golden rule found in Matthew 7:12 to do unto others as you would have them do unto you, and the second greatest commandment, to love your neighbor as yourself, found in Matthew 22:39.

“We take these teachings quite seriously and believe that this is indeed a moral issue and a Gospel issue for our state, and therefore we want to be not a political player in the process,” Parker said. “We want to be a prophetic voice, and our hope is that our stand and our conviction will bring healing to the racial tensions that are felt in Mississippi.”

Larry Young, the first African American elected as an MBC officer, has told Baptist Press that Scripture dictated the removal of the old flag. He served two terms as MBC second vice president in 2014 and 2015.

“My thought process is the Scripture clearly states that if it offends my brother to eat rice, I will not eat rice,” said Young, pastor of Spangle Banner Missionary Baptist Church in Pace. “And the problem with the flag is it is offensive to some, and even though where you stand in regards to what the rebel portion represents, inasmuch as it is offensive to some, that makes it offensive to all. So I’m all for changing the design of it.”

The Southern Baptist Convention repudiated the display [5] of the Confederate flag in a 2016 resolution called “On Sensitivity And Unity Regarding The Confederate Battle Flag [6].”