In a glimpse of old prejudices, First Baptist Church of Crystal Springs suddenly closes doors to black couple's wedding

God's love is colour-blind. Not so, it seems, when it comes to the First Baptist Church of Crystal Springs in Mississippi.

Charles and Te'Andrea Wilson, an African American couple from nearby Jackson, were all set for their big wedding day on Saturday at the 150-year-old church that they have been attending regularly for months. The sanctuary of the church had been arranged, the rehearsal was set for Friday, invitations had been sent out to friends extending a "special thank you to the First Baptist Church and members".

Then, at about 5.10pm on Thursday evening Te'Andrea received a call. Some of the congregation of the church, which is largely white, had seen a group of black women setting up the sanctuary for the wedding and complained to the pastor.

"If the pastor married her, because they were black then they would vote him out," Te'Andrea was told. The wedding was off.

"When I got the news I couldn't believe it at first," Charles Wilson told the Jackson Clarion-Leader. "This is not a matter of colour for me, it's about God, and what better place to get married than God's sanctuary. God's love is colour blind."

Wilson confronted the pastor, Stan Weatherford, and asked him what had happened. According to Wilson, he replied that he had "received all sorts of phone calls, text messages, and it was just not going to happen".

Later, Weatherford told the local channel WLBT News that weddings of black couples had never happened before in the church, "so it was setting a precedent, and there were those who reacted to that". He added: "I didn't want to have a controversy within the church, and I didn't want a controversy to affect the wedding of Charles and Te'Andrea. I wanted to make sure their wedding day was a special day."

Wilson said he liked the pastor but still thinks he should have taken a stand. "If you're for Christ, you can't straddle the fence. He knew it was wrong," he said.

The ceremony was switched to a neighbouring Methodist church and went ahead with Weatherford officiating without further ado.

Paradoxically, the Southern Baptist Convention, America's largest Protestant denomination, has elected its first black leader – Reverend Fred Luter of New Orleans.

The objections of the First Baptist members did not reflect the unanimous view of the congregation. Some expressed dismay at what had happened.

Casey Kitchens told the Clarion-Ledger: "This is a small, small group of people who made a terrible decision. I'm just ashamed right now that my church would do that."

Officials of the First Baptist Church are planning to hold a meeting on how to proceed. Charles Wilson is also considering his next move.