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Black Methodism

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Title: Black Methodism


1
Black Methodism
  • Beginnings
  • Challenges
  • Changes

2
African Methodist Episcopal Church
  • The African Methodist Episcopal Church was
    started in 1787 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, by
    a group of disinherited Americans whose
    forefathers came from Africa. The leader of this
    group was a 27 year old "African," Richard Allen.
    At that time the word "African" was used to
    designate those persons whom we now call African
    American.

3
Five Characteristics of Black Church Experience
  • Black controlled
  • Involved in the everyday life of the people
  • Provide members with a sense of worthiness and
    identity
  • Emphasize evangelism with direct witness to
    saving love of Jesus Christ
  • Adaptive to changing conditions of society while
    challenging oppressive forces

4
Early Methodism Response to Black Americans
  • Offered emotionalism and religious enthusiasm
    (Revivalism)
  • Lagged behind Baptists in obtaining black
    congregations
  • Revivalism offered escape from intolerable
    economic and social conditions

5
Remember Betty?
  • Black girl in Philip Emburys Class at the John
    Street Methodist Society in New York, 1766.
  • Several Northern societies integrated early
  • Southern societies begin practicing segregation
    and racial selection early
  • Asbury concerned about racial segregation but
    knew no way to affect change

6
Early Black Methodism
  • Whatcoats journals record increased incidences
    of segregation, especially concerning the
    sacrament of Holy Supper.
  • Asbury and Whatcoat adjust to the growing white
    desire for segregated worship
  • General Conference 1800 allows for the ordination
    of black preachers as deacons
  • Elder ordination not until 1812

7
Early Black Methodism
  • Harry Hosier (1750-1806) was born a slave in
    North Carolina.  Following the Revolutionary War
    he gained his freedom from his Maryland master,
    and was converted to Methodism.  His sermon, "The
    Barren Fig Tree," preached at Adam's Chapel,
    Fairfax County, Virginia, in May of 1781, was the
    first recorded Methodist sermon by an
    African-American.

8
Early Black Methodism
  • Hosier became famous as a traveling evangelist up
    and down the Atlantic seaboard.  He was a
    companion on evangelistic trips with Asbury,
    Coke, Jesse Lee, and Freeborn Garrettson,  and
    was heralded as one of the greatest preachers of
    his time.   His influence was one of the most
    important factors in the early spread of the
    Methodist Episcopal Church in America.

9
Early Black Methodism
  • Mother African Zoar Church began in 1792, when a
    group of African Americans withdrew from Old St.
    George's Church to protest discrimination there.
    The dissident group, calling itself "African
    Zoar" (HE good will) was recognized by St.
    George's in 1794 and grew to become the mother
    church of several local Methodist congregations,
    including Tindley Temple, Raven Memorial, Mount
    Zion, and St. Thomas.

10
Pattern of Black Denomination Formation
  • Integration with White congregation
  • Experience of Segregation
  • Separate Meeting Times established
  • Separate Meeting Places established
  • Blacks found independent church
  • Independent churches fashion a denomination

11
Early Black Methodism
  • Richard Allen (1760-1831), the founder of the
    African Methodist Episcopal Church was born a
    slave in Philadelphia.  After purchasing his own
    freedom as a young man, he joined St. George's
    Methodist Church, from which in 1787 he led a
    dramatic withdrawal of black members.  Allen soon
    became pastor of the group and was ordained as a
    deacon by Bishop Asbury.  When the African
    Methodist Episcopal Church was organized
    nationally in 1816, Allen was consecrated its
    first Bishop.

12
Richard Allen
  • Licensed to preach - 1784
  • Ordained Deacon by Asbury 1784
  • Stages Walkout of St. George Church -1787
  • Organizes Free African Society 1784
  • Mother Bethel Church started - 1784

13
FREE AFRICAN SOCIETY
  • Allen, along with Absalom Jones, came together to
    form the Free African Society (FAS) on April 12,
    1787. The Society, though not religiously
    affiliated, proved much like a church in serving
    the black community. NAACP founder, W.E.B.
    DuBois, writing a century later, called the FAS,
    "the first wavering step of a people toward
    organized social life." Organized as an
    altruistic society for extending mutual aid to
    the widowed, sick, and jobless, it was funded by
    dues-paying members.

14
Mother Bethel Church
  • Allen received permission from St. George Church
    to build a church on the site where he purchased
    the land for St. Thomas's years earlier. Allen
    bought a blacksmith shop and had it hauled by a
    team of his own horses to 6th and Lombard. Bishop
    Asbury presided over the church's dedication on
    July 29, 1794.

15
Mother Bethel Church
  • But tensions develop over who owns the deed to
    the church.
  • Discipline claimed the church at large owned
    the building
  • Members of Mother Bethel wanted to own the
    property
  • 1796 Articles of Association of Bethel AME
    Church formed.
  • 1830- Convention of Colored Men of U.S. held
    there. Bishop Allen presided.

16
Mother Bethel Church
  • Mother Bethel Church was a stop on the
    Underground Railroad.
  • The ground on which Mother Bethel stands is the
    oldest parcel of real estate continuously owned
    by African-Americans in the United States.
  • The first black boy scout troop was founded at
    Mother Bethel Church.

17
Convention of 1816
  • African Methodist Church formed
  • Polity identical to Methodist Episcopal
  • Exception no presiding elders
  • Allen elected first Bishop
  • Slave owners could not become members

18
Two Important AME Aspects
  • Took a strong stance against discrimination and
    segregation has always counted whites among its
    membership
  • Work of Richard Allen seen as expression of
    Nationalism, the challenging of economic and
    political policies detrimental to Black Americans.

19
Allens Nationalism Movement
  • A leader of the free black community in
    Philadelphia, Allen also served as one of  the
    spokesmen for the forces opposed to the American
    Colonization Society, an organization that
    proposed sending freedmen back to Africa.  His
    campaign against the colonizationists resulted in
    the first meeting of the National Negro
    Convention Movement in 1830 -- a loosely
    organized group that functioned as a public
    platform for black abolitionists and community
    leaders.

20
Freedoms Journal
  • Freedom's Journal, the first African-American
    owned and operated newspaper published in the
    United States, was published weekly in New York
    City from 1827 to 1829. John B. Russworm edited
    the journal alone between March 16, 1827 and
    March 28, 1829. Later,  Samuel Cornish served as
    co-editor (March 16, 1827 to September 14, 1827).
    Richard Allen was a regular contributor (see web
    site)

21
African Methodist Episcopal Zion Church
  • 1796  Peter Williams, James Varick, Christopher
    Rush and other African Americans of the John
    Street Methodist Church, a white church in New
    York City, hold separate meetings in October.
  • 1801, William and others incorporate the Zion
    Chapel into the Methodist Episcopal Church
  • Schism causes division of an Asbury
    Congregation from the Zion congregation

22
Peter Williams
  • Peter Williams, Sr., was for a number of years
    the sexton of the John Street Methodist Church,
    in which position he became distinguished among
    the white communicants for his fidelity and
    piety. He joined with other Negroes desirous of
    independent church action and established the
    Zion Church, out of which emerged the African
    Methodist Episcopal Zion Church
  • From The History of the Negro Church by Woodson,
    Carter Godwin, (1875-1950), pg. 95

23
African Methodist Episcopal Zion Church
  • 1820 Rev. William Stillwell leads a
    congregationalist schism from New York Methodism.
    Zion Chapel goes with Stillwell for a while.
  • Asbury congregation and Zion Chapel reunite in
    1821 to form the African Methodist Episcopal Zion
    Church in American.
  • Several elders ordained following year.

24
African Methodist Episcopal Zion Church
  • 1820  Zion and Asbury hold organizational meeting
    to form own denomination, October
  • 1821  Zion, Asbury and four other congregations
    hold conference in New York City to establish a
    new organization separate from Richard Allen's
    Methodists, June 21
  • 1822  Zion pastor, James Varick elected first
    bishop of denomination
  • 1824  New group officially breaks ties with the
    white Methodist denomination 
  • 1828  First General Conference of the A.M.E Zion
    Church held

25
Peter Spencer (1782-1843)
  • Peter Spencer was born a slave in Kent County,
    Maryland. When freed, he moved to Wilmington. He
    was soon an active in community and in his
    church, Asbury Methodist Episcopal Church.  In
    protest against the church's  racial
    discrimination Spencer led almost forty members
    out of Asbury to form Ezion M.E. Church.  

26
African Union Church
  • Eight years later, in 1813, still frustrated by
    the Methodist Episcopal church's discrimination,
    the Spencer and William Anderson led another
    group away from the church.  They founded an
    independent church, the Union Church of African
    Members, the first African American controlled
    church in America.  Spencer served as pastor and
    elder minister until his death.  The Union Church
    spread quickly to include congregations in
    Delaware, Maryland, New Jersey, and New York. 

27
African Union Church
  • Methodist Episcopol in polity with one exception
    congregations appointed own pastors.
  • Bishops called Presidents
  • Forms the African Union First Colored Methodist
    Protestant Church of the United States of America
    and Elsewhere (1865)
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