Historical Overview of African American Religion

Authors

  • Nino Gamsakhurdia International Black Sea University

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.31578/hum.v3i1.303

Keywords:

Christianity, African Americans, Black Church

Abstract

One of the central themes in the American history is the interaction between white and black cultures, both in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries of America. The religion perfectly reflects this interaction. As Campbell notes, African American religion has been extremely important both for American religious culture as a whole, and for the black community itself. When freedmen withdrew from white-dominated churches and formed their religious institutions, black churches, they quickly occupied a central position in African Americans’ lives. They became the chief social and cultural institutions which blacks made and operated for themselves, and therefore were necessary in promoting a sense of communal purpose. They provided the organizational structure for most activities of the community: economic, political, and educational as well as religious. This article overviews the processes out of which the black church formed as an independent institution, that served as a unifying, powerful and stimulating instrument for the African American community’s future advancements and struggle for equality.

Author Biography

Nino Gamsakhurdia, International Black Sea University

Doctoral Student

Faculty of Humanities

Department of American Studies

International Black Sea University

 

Downloads

Published

24-09-2014

How to Cite

Gamsakhurdia, N. (2014). Historical Overview of African American Religion. Journal in Humanities, 3(1), 45–48. https://doi.org/10.31578/hum.v3i1.303

Issue

Section

Articles