Grace Baptist Church felt different that weekend. Not just busy. Not just full. But purposeful. From the moment the doors opened, the energy of legacy, ambition, and love for our children filled every hallway and handshake. The second annual Grace HBCU Weekend wasn’t just an event; it was a reminder to our young people of who they are and where they come from.
Saturday, February 21, 2026, set the tone. The sanctuary transformed into a bridge between dreams and opportunity. More than 25 HBCUs showed up, not just with brochures, but with belief. Parents leaned in with hope in their eyes. Students lit up when someone finally said, “Yes, you belong here.” The Ice Cold Experience Drumline shook the room like a heartbeat, reminding everyone that culture is power. The Financial Aid panel broke down barriers, and the Young HBCU Alumni spoke truth about resilience, identity, and survival with grace.
You could feel that this weekend was carefully held, envisioned by Rev. Dr. W. Franklyn Richardson and brought to life by Dr. Candace Phaire, Deacon Clinton Myke, and Sakai Brown. This wasn’t programming for show. This was people who understood that representation isn’t symbolic, it’s necessary.
Sunday sealed it.
HBCU Sunday and Youth Sunday weren’t performances; they were affirmations. The pews became a runway of pride, Divine Nine letters, school colors, Black power statements stitched into fabric and spirit. Every outfit told a story. Every smile carried possibility. When the drumline performed again, it felt ceremonial. Like a declaration: Yes. This is who we are. This is where we’re going.
