If you are wondering what UUMUAC, or even multiracial unity, is all about, you’ve come to the right place. Barbara Jean Walsh, and I am the vice-chair of UUMUAC, the Unitarian Universalist Multiracial Unity Council. One of the first people I met after moving to Chicago a few years ago was Finley Cambell. It has been a real treat for me to work on archiving his audio files since I did not have the opportunity to hear him deliver full-length services in person. This particular sermon is an excellent introduction to the spirit and philosophy of the man who founded UUMUAC – and why.
Rev. Dr. Finley C. Campbell’s 2006 Black History Month sermon is a powerful, dramatic, and deeply engaging exploration of race, history, and the future of Unitarian Universalism. Delivered in his signature “dramatic monologue” style, the sermon blends humor, scholarship, storytelling, and prophetic urgency. Campbell invites the congregation to join him in a three‑act “drama,” asking them to listen not just as observers but as participants in a shared moral struggle.
Speaking against the backdrop of a turbulent 2006—Supreme Court battles, war, political polarization, the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina, and the death of Coretta Scott King—Campbell argues that we are living in a time of “irrepressible conflict.” In such a moment, he says, understanding the multiracial roots of Black history is essential for building a just and unified future.
Campbell challenges the congregation to distinguish between diversity and division. Diversity, he notes, has always been part of the Black experience, shaped by centuries of interracial relationships—both loving and violent. But diversity becomes dangerous when it fragments community instead of strengthening it. He reminds listeners that the great movements for justice in American history succeeded only when people of many backgrounds worked together.
A major portion of the sermon unpacks the origins of racism, which Campbell describes not as natural prejudice but as a deliberately constructed ideology. Drawing on history, theology, and personal experience, he shows how racism was created to justify slavery, institutionalized in the Constitution through the Three‑Fifths Compromise, and reinforced by scientists, artists, churches, and governments. He distinguishes racism from prejudice and bigotry, arguing that racism is a system—one that empowers bigots and shapes national policy.
Campbell then turns to the future, echoing Martin Luther King Jr.’s warning that America must choose between chaos or community. He argues that Unitarian Universalists face a similar choice: between a multiculturalism that keeps groups separate and a multiracial unity that brings people together in shared struggle. True unity, he insists, is not colorblindness but a “rainbow of steel”—distinct identities joined in common purpose.
The sermon ends with a call to action. Campbell urges congregations to become sites of resistance, places where people can find solidarity, courage, and community in the face of political and economic challenges. He envisions a Unitarian Universalism that embodies the universalist ideal: a fellowship that transcends race, class, and nation, grounded in justice and human dignity.
This sermon is rich, challenging, and often humorous. It moves quickly—from Aristotle to Jefferson, from South Pacific to the Civil War, from biblical imagery to contemporary politics—yet it remains deeply personal and grounded in lived experience. Whether read or heard, it offers a compelling vision of what multiracial community can be.
Many thanks to Finley’s wife and comrade Bobbi for give UUMUAC access to this and other recordings.