John Wiley & Sons The Black Church in America Cover This book gives readers a broad understanding of the Black Church in America and a sense of its uniq.. Product #: 978-1-4051-1891-0 Regular price: $111.21 $111.21 In Stock

The Black Church in America

African American Christian Spirtuality

Battle, Michael

Religious Life in America

Cover

1. Edition June 2006
252 Pages, Hardcover
Wiley & Sons Ltd

ISBN: 978-1-4051-1891-0
John Wiley & Sons

Further versions

Softcovermobi

This book gives readers a broad understanding of the Black Church
in America and a sense of its uniqueness in the wider world.

* * Explores the history of the Black Church in America, its
African roots, beliefs, practices, politics, and contemporary moral
dilemmas

* Argues that in the Black Church, individual and communal
destiny are bound together

* The author is a Priest in the Episcopal Church and teaches
spirituality and Black Church studies at Duke University.

Acknowledgements.

Introduction: An Amphibious Worldview.

1. Emergence of What is African.

African Warnings.

What is African?.

2. The Particularity of African American
Spirituality.

3. The Black Church in the Shadow of Slavery.

The Scourge of Slavery.

The Survival of Africanism.

The Emergence of Black Denominations.

4. Communal Worship.

The Controversy of Emotionalism.

"Spiritual Song" and the Emergence of Black
Denominations.

African Methodist Episcopal Zion Church.

Christian Methodist Episcopal Church.

African American Baptists Churches.

National Baptist Convention, USA.

African American Pentecostalism.

Black Worship.

5. Inviting Others to Be Black.

African vs. Black: Dialectic Tension.

James Cone and Desmond Tutu.

African and Black: Communal Synthesis.

6. The Black Church as the Beloved Community.

King's View: Prophecy and Nonviolence.

African American Responses to King.

King's Dream of the Beloved Community.

Communal Antithesis for King.

7. Embodying African American Spirituality.

A Churchless Black Church.

A Womanless Black Church.

The Full Embodiment of the Black Church.

Timeline of the Black Church.

Websites for Historic Black Denominations.

Bibliography.

Index
"This work is a good contribution to the other books that are in
the field of African American spirituality." (Expository
Times, December 2008)



"The key to understanding Battle's fine study of the black
church is found in his background as an African American Episcopal
priest. His major thesis is that a strong sense of community
pervades African American spirituality, which comes from communal
African religious traditions and the survival needs of enslaved
Africans in a hostile American environment. Although Battle's
treatment of the historical material is not new, his emphasis on
the communal worship and spirituality of African American
Christianity is an important theological direction. Deeply
influenced by the theology of Archbishop Desmond Tutu, who ordained
him, Battle (Virginia Theological Seminary) argues that the
communal spirituality of African Americans should be inclusive,
eventually "inviting others to be black." He pushes this theme of
community and reconciliation with a chapter that elaborates on
Martin Luther King Jr.'s vision of "the Beloved Community,"
indicating that the black church can be the fulfillment of that
view. He concludes the study with two challenges: a "Churchless
Black Church" and a "Womanless Black Church." The book includes a
historical time line and a bibliography. Summing Up:
Recommended. Advanced undergraduates, graduate students, and
specialists in the field." (Choice)

"The African American churches need less absolutizing in order
to undertake their great task of addressing the still rampant
inequality and structural racism that criminalizes so many of their
young males and reduces others to passivity. A radical gospel is
needed more than ever, and it is to be hoped that this book will
stimulate research to galvanize the churches into reflective
action." (Theological Book Review)

"An intriguing attempt at building a case for an African
American Spirituality that is communal and relational in nature."
(Expository Times)

"Michael Battle's book is a wise and bold treatment of the most
complex phenomenon in Afro-American life: The Black Church. We need
to listen to his words."

-Cornel West, Princeton University
Michael Battle served as Assistant Professor of Spirituality and Black Church Studies at Duke University and Rector of St. Ambrose Episcopal Church in Raleigh, North Carolina before moving to Virginia Theological Seminary. He was also Vice Chairman of the board of the Ghandi Institute. He is the author of The Church Enslaved: A Spirituality of Racial Reconciliation (2005), Reconciliation in a Violent World (2005) Blessed are the Peacemakers: A Christian Spirituality of Nonviolence (2004), The Wisdom of Desmond Tutu (1999) and Reconciliation: The Ubuntu Theology of Desmond Tutu (1997).

M. Battle, Assistant Professor of Spirituality and Black Church Studies at Duke University