Houston Chronicle Sunday

Freedom Churches

From New York to Alabama, blacks worshipped in their own spaces before slavery’s end

- By Adelle M. Banks RELIGION NEWS SERVICE

NEW YORK — On a narrow street in Harlem sits the oldest black church in New York state, one of many black congregati­ons that developed in the decades before slavery ended nationwide and that worked for its abolition.

“Mother AME Zion Church is without question, insofar as New York City is concerned,” says its new pastor, the Rev. Malcolm Byrd, “the grand depot of the Undergroun­d Railroad.”

As the nation marks the 400th anniversar­y of the forced arrival of Africans in Virginia — and New York notes the centennial of the Harlem Renaissanc­e — this “Freedom Church” joins others that have represente­d the enduring faith of slaves, free blacks and their descendant­s. Historians say the total number is hard to determine but there were likely more than 100 black churches in existence before the 1865 ratificati­on of the 13th Amendment, which officially abolished slavery.

A who’s who of black history figures worshipped and spoke at Mother African Methodist Episcopal Zion Church — including abolitioni­sts Frederick Douglass and Sojourner Truth — when it was at earlier locations after its founding in 1796 or at its current neo-Gothic site on 137th Street in Harlem.

Truth joined Mother AME Zion in 1829 after leaving predominan­tly white John Street Methodist Church, where scholars say people of African descent could not serve in leadership and had to wait to take Communion until whites had partaken of the sacrament.

A group of black members left that white congregati­on in 1796 to form a separate church that included black licensed preachers such as James Varick, who later became the first bishop of the African Methodist Episcopal Zion Church, a denominati­on formed 25 years later.

“Put yourself in their situation,” said the Rev. William McKenith, historian for the 1.4 millionmem­ber AME Zion Church. “Here you are a human being, but by virtue of your circumstan­ce, you’re being treated less than human, even in the church, and you want to express your humanity.”

McKenith said their quest for freedom from oppression was fueled by an amalgam of current history and personal experience: the American Declaratio­n of Independen­ce from Great Britain, the Haitian Revolution’s goal of conquering slavery and French rule, and their own African traditions that affirmed their humanity.

“The church from the very beginning was always talking about a liberation motif,” he said of the theologica­l linking of salvation and freedom. “The gospel resonated with them and they saw the liberation aspect of the gospel and that inspired them. That was their inspiratio­n — like the declaratio­n was the inspiratio­n of the country to form a new nation.”

Other prominent black churches where free blacks, former slaves and slaves worshipped in the 1700s and early 1800s include First African Baptist Church of Savannah, Ga.; Mother Bethel African Methodist Episcopal Church in Philadelph­ia; and Mother Emanuel AME Church in Charleston, S.C. Some, such as Mother Emanuel, had to worship undergroun­d when laws in their states were passed to prevent blacks from gathering on their own for worship or having their own preachers.

But, whether in establishe­d buildings or secret spaces, their congregant­s’ faith persisted along with their desire for freedom.

“The states are passing laws against behavior that already exists,” said the Rev. Cheryl Townsend Gilkes, professor of sociology and African-American studies at Colby College.

“African-Americans did not become Christian by default but they came out of slavery with a Christiani­ty that was critical of the people who enslaved them.”

Blacks joined independen­t Baptist congregati­ons and new denominati­ons like the AME and AME Zion churches, leaving behind white churches and eventually white preachers, whose sermons to slaves — in sanctuarie­s and on plantation­s — often fo“How cused on Scripture passages about slaves obeying masters or left out portions of the Bible that told stories of exodus.

“All you have to do is look at the spirituals to see where African-Americans were connecting with the Bible in spite of the fact that you had white missionari­es who had a truncated Bible that they were sharing with slaves because they didn’t want them to know about Moses,” Gilkes said. “They didn’t want them to know about some of the liberative aspects of the Christian doctrine.”

Old Ship African Methodist Episcopal Zion Church in Montgomery, Ala., for example, was founded by blacks in that city when white leaders of the expanding Court Street Methodist Church gave black members their old building, said church historian Kathy Dunn Jackson. Blacks had previously worshipped in the balcony or an outdoor brush arbor.

Under the supervisio­n of a free black man, a group, including several slaves, relocated the building — by rolling the building on logs, according to the church’s official history — to the site on the edge of the city where the congregati­on began in 1852, said Montgomery historian Richard Bailey.

A decade later, its first black minister, still a slave at the time, replaced white clergy who had previously served in its pulpit. And, as the AME Zion Church began its expansion into the

South after the Civil War, Old Ship, known at one time as Clinton Chapel, joined the denominati­on.

Just like its AME Zion counterpar­t in New York’s Harlem, Old Ship attracted a range of prominent speakers over the years — including Douglass.

The 1974 history of the denominati­on, “The African Methodist Episcopal Zion Church: Reality of the Black Church,” notes that the New York church was one of the places where a large crowd of blacks welcomed him back to the U.S. in 1847. He had left for England two years before as a fugitive slave and returned a free, and much more well-known, man.

“What contrast is my present with my former condition? Then a slave, now a free man,” wrote Douglass of his return, as quoted in the AME Zion history book, “my name unheard of beyond the narrow limits of a republican slave plantation; now, my friends and benefactor­s people of both hemisphere­s, to heaven the praise belongs!”

 ?? Adelle M. Banks / Religion News Service ?? Mother African Methodist Episcopal Zion Church in New York’s Harlem neighborho­od.
Adelle M. Banks / Religion News Service Mother African Methodist Episcopal Zion Church in New York’s Harlem neighborho­od.
 ?? Courtesy photo ?? Sojourner Truth
Courtesy photo Sojourner Truth
 ?? Corbis ?? Frederick Douglass
Corbis Frederick Douglass

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