In the fall of
2008, newspapers, talk shows and blogs exploded with news that the Rev.
Jeremiah Wright, the African American minister from Chicago's Trinity Church,
had denounced the United States with inflammatory language: "God damn
America!" Wright's most famous parishioner was the leading Democratic
contender for the presidential nomination, Barack Obama. Trinity was Obama's
spiritual home -- the place where he had found religion, where he was married,
and where his daughters had been baptized. Rev. Wright, a former Marine with a
Ph.D., had served as his spiritual mentor.
While many white
voters seemed surprised, puzzled and shocked by Wright's angry rhetoric,
African Americans were less so. Obama seized the moment to deliver a profound
meditation on race in America, a speech titled "A More
Perfect Union." Tracing the deep historical roots of racial inequality
and injustice, Obama put Wright's anger into historical context. In very
personal terms, he also described his experience at Trinity:
Like other black churches, Trinity's services are full of
raucous laughter and sometimes bawdy humor. They are full of dancing, clapping,
screaming and shouting that may seem jarring to the untrained ear. The church
contains in full the kindness and cruelty, the fierce intelligence and the
shocking ignorance, the struggles and successes, the love and yes, the
bitterness and bias that make up the black experience in America.
Eventually Obama
broke with Wright and left Trinity, but his speech illuminated the role of the
black church in the African American experience. Standing apart from the
dominant white society, yet engaged in a continuing dialogue with it, the
church evolved with countless acts of faith and resistance, piety and protest.
As historian Anthea Butler has observed, the church has been profoundly shaped
by regional differences, North and South, East and West, yet in both the
private and public spheres, the church was, and remains, sustained and animated
by idea of freedom.
The term
"the black church" evolved from the phrase "the Negro
church," the title of a pioneering sociological study of African American
Protestant churches at the turn of the century by W.E.B. Du Bois.
In its origins, the phrase was largely an academic category. Many African
Americans did not think of themselves as belonging to "the Negro
church," but rather described themselves according to denominational
affiliations such as Methodist, Baptist, Presbyterian, and even
"Saint" of the Sanctified tradition. African American Christians were
never monolithic; they have always been diverse and their churches highly
decentralized.
Today "the
black church" is widely understood to include the following seven major
black Protestant denominations: the National Baptist Convention, the National
Baptist Convention of America, the Progressive National Convention, the African
Methodist Episcopal Church, the African Methodist Episcopal Zion Church, the
Christian Methodist Episcopal Church and the Church of God in Christ.
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