The Rev. Dr. Cheryl Pero is past Director of the Rev. Dr. Albert “Pete” Pero, Jr., Multicultural Center at LSTC.
When Did We See You, Lord?
May 2020 Special Issue: COVID-19 (Volume 20 Issue 3)
When the Son of Man comes in his glory, and all the angels with him, then he will sit on the throne of his glory. All the nations will be gathered before him, and he will separate people one from another as a shepherd separates the sheep from the goats, and he will put the […]
Resolution in loving memory of the Rev. Dr. James Kenneth Echols
June/July 2019: Income Inequality Part II (Volume 19 Issue 3)
May 26, 1951 – December 22, 2018 No matter what your trials are, or how big your mountain seems; The Lord is there to see you through; To go to all extremes. So if your cross seems hard to bear, and you know not what to do; The One who loves you most of all will […]
Identity within the Ethical Formulations of the African American Family
October 2002 (Volume 2 Issue 10)
Albert "Pete" Pero, Cheryl Pero
[1] We outlined and began writing this article in August 2002. In the ensuing weeks, a number of ethical and moral issues emerged in the United States in general and in the African American context in particular. These issues have implications for both church and society. These issues caused us to pause and reflect as […]
Resolution in Loving Memory of the Rev. Dr. James Kenneth Echols
June/July 2019: Income Inequality Part II (Volume 19 Issue 3)
“No matter what your trials are, or how big your mountain seems; The Lord is there to see you through; To go to all extremes. So if your cross seems hard to bear, and you know not what to do; The One who loves you most of all will be there to see you through. We, members of the Conference of International Black Lutherans, want the Echols family to know that our hearts are with you as we gather to remember the life of our brother and man of faith, the Rev. Dr. James Kenneth Echols.”
When Did We See You, Lord?
October 2013: When Did We See You, Lord? (Volume 13 Issue 6)
In the aftermath of Trayvon Martin’s death and George Zimmerman’s acquittal, Cheryl Pero uses the framework of Luther’s catechism to ask: “will we use this opportunity to expose, explore, and exorcize our racial problems or continue to pretend that we live in a “post-racial” society, in a state of denial?”