The Next Step in Racial Cooperation: A Discourse Delivered in the Fifteenth Street Presbyterian Church, Washington, D.C., November 20, 1921

Sermon urging racial cooperation based on mutual respect, justice, and equal education, economic and civil rights. Final step: embrace Christian brotherhood and character.

Francis James Grimké was an American Presbyterian minister, theologian, and long-serving pastor of Fifteenth Street Presbyterian Church in Washington, D.C., known for his powerful preaching and nearly fifty years of faithful gospel ministry. Over the course of his ministry, Grimké exercised broad influence through preaching, writing, denominational participation, and the mentoring of younger ministers, leaving a lasting mark on American Presbyterian life in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries.

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