"A Racialized History" explores the concept of race from a theological perspective, particularly through the lens of the Bible. It argues that history has a racial component and that the Bible provides the necessary data to understand this racialized interpretation. The document emphasizes the duality in humanity as seen in the Bible, dividing people into two groups: the saved and the unsaved. The saved are those who have accepted Jesus Christ and are spiritually reborn, while the unsaved live according to the sinful patterns of the world and are separated from God.
The document further explains that the Bible's understanding of race is distinct from the worldly view. It describes the saved as a new race of spiritually mature individuals who live in a different reality, set apart for God's purposes. In contrast, the unsaved are bound by the law and live in the flesh, influenced by the world's systems and Satan's deception. The document concludes that there are only two possible races: those who live according to the truths of Scripture and those who do not.