Letter From the Editor: Are Reparations Biblical? If So, Why?
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Hello Truth Seekers and Believers,
In the latest headlines, Atlanta news sounded the alarm—over 300,000 women, many of them African American, have been laid off in less than a year. The number is staggering. Yes, people of all backgrounds are losing jobs, but this one strikes deep for me. As an African American senior who has watched these patterns unfold for decades, I feel compelled to share not just the facts, but my testimony, my opinion, and a biblical lens on how God sees this moment. After all, there is nothing new under the sun—He has already given us His counsel and determined what is fair and just. Now, let’s talk about it.

Alt tag: #Letter from the editor’s desk
Facts: Ebony magazine reports In April 2025 alone, 106,000 Black women lost their jobs, the largest single-month drop of any demographic group EBONY+1.
Comparative Unemployment Rates
- The unemployment rate for Black women surged: 5.1% in March, 6.1% in April, 6.2% in May, with a slight dip to 5.8% in June The 19th.
- By comparison, unemployment among White women and Asian women remained near 3%, and Latinas around 5% The 19th+1.
- The average duration of unemployment for Black women exceeded six months, the highest among all groups The 19th.
As I read the stories and remembered my own experiences, I couldn’t help but ask: Are reparations biblical? I believe the answer is yes, and here’s why.
- A volatile trend: Black men experienced a fluctuating unemployment rate—from 6.9% in January to the high of 7.5% in June.
- Labor participation dropping: A sharp decline to 65% in May, down from about 69%, signals that a significant number of Black men have likely stopped job searching or left the workforce entirely.
- Comparatively worse outcomes: Both unemployment and participation figures for Black men remain worse than national averages and worse than parallel figures for Black women.
Three Biblical Reasons God Supports Reparations
- Restitution for Wrongdoing – In Scripture, when someone was wronged or their property was taken, God commanded restoration—sometimes double or more. “If a man shall steal… he shall restore five oxen for an ox” (Exodus 22:1, KJV). Slavery was not just theft of wages, but theft of lives, generations, and inheritance.
- Breaking Generational Curses – God cares about breaking the chains that pass from generation to generation. Reparations would address not just past injustice, but the lingering economic wounds seen in generational poverty. “The iniquity of the fathers” (Exodus 34:7) often leaves scars unless actively healed.
- Jubilee Principle – Every 50 years in Israel, debts were canceled and land was returned to the original families (Leviticus 25:10). This was God’s built-in system to prevent permanent oppression and restore fairness. If this was His command for Israel, how much more should it be a principle for justice today?
Personal Testimony
I have seen the silent patterns of discrimination all my life. At nearly every job, when layoffs came, Black men were the first to go, then Black women. Later, those positions were quietly filled by friends from other departments or outside companies—sometimes people less qualified but with the right “connections.”
I recall a young Black man, a brilliant computer engineer, ecstatic about his new stability. He had just secured an apartment with his girlfriend after years of setbacks. Within a week, he was let go—not for poor performance, but because he was too good, fixing problems others couldn’t. They kept a less skilled worker with personal ties to leadership. I’ve seen talented Black professionals replaced, passed over, and quietly pushed out, while favoritism and even inappropriate relationships secured promotions for others.
Over the years, I’ve watched a quiet but relentless cycle strip our communities of wealth, homes, and hope. Programs that promise equality often fall short, leaving no lasting change. Other groups—rightfully—have received targeted aid, sometimes without so much as a public vote. Yet African Americans with slavery descent remain pushed to the back of the line. I’ve seen firsthand what my older relatives spoke of: the banks that discriminated, the courtrooms that robbed people of their property, the closed-door deals that ensured certain folks never had a fair shot.
As a young person, I struggled to believe their stories. Now, with age and experience, I see it clearly—and I see it worsening. Resources are becoming something to fight for, and those battles are often fought in silence. The world may not notice, but we live with the weight of unspoken prejudice every day. It doesn’t just block opportunities—it fractures families, erodes trust, and kills dreams slowly. This is silent oppression, and it leaves no room for excuses or justification.

Alt Tag: #Prayer hands
Why Reparations Now?
Reparations are not just about the past—they’re about repairing what is still broken today. Generational linkage problems, lost wealth, and systemic barriers are not abstract ideas—they are lived realities. Black families continue to lose homes to taxes, suffer disproportionate layoffs, and carry economic wounds that never had the chance to heal.
If God required restitution, commanded Jubilee, and taught that justice is part of righteousness (Isaiah 1:17 KJV), then Christians must admit: reparations are biblical. They are a moral, not just political, issue.
Reflection Question:
If God cared enough to restore stolen sheep and land, how much more does He care about restoring stolen generations?
Supporting Scriptures:
- Exodus 22:1 KJV – Restitution principle.
- Leviticus 25:10 KJV – Jubilee restoration.
- Isaiah 1:17 KJV – “Learn to do well; seek judgment, relieve the oppressed…”
I hope this sheds light on the issue and offers you a fresh perspective. My prayer is that it inspires you to support reparations and take action—write to Congress or your local representative. Send an email and see what kind of response you receive. Approach it without anger, but clearly communicate what you believe should happen in the area of reparations, and don’t hesitate to include a dollar amount you feel is fair.
Remember, you are expressing your own opinion and your own wishes—something you have every right to do. Just as other communities speak on behalf of their people, so can we. After all, political representatives are public servants, and they need to hear from the people they serve. Send prayers up to the most high God in Jesus Christ so he will lead the move. Don’t worry about what someone will and will not do. Keep asking and showing interest until God delivers.
“Make haste, O God, to deliver me; make haste to help me, O Lord.” — Psalm 70:1 (KJV)
May Our Living Hope in Jesus Christ Find You Faithful,
Editor, Daily Scripture Explained.com
Keywords: letter from the editor, black women, reparations, biblical justice, African American history, economic equality, job loss, generational wealth, restitution, Jubilee principle, racial equity, unemployment crisis. bibleverse,
Hashtags: #ReparationsNow, #BiblicalJustice, #EconomicEquality, #GenerationalWealth, #RacialEquity, #JusticeMatters, #BlackHistory, #FaithAndJustice, #CommunityStrength, #UnemploymentCrisis.
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