USA TODAY International Edition

Singing the praises of ‘ The Black Church’

- Bill Keveney

Before Henry Louis Gates Jr. spoke to music stars John Legend and Yolanda Adams for a PBS project on the Black church in America, he was warned not to ask them to sing. It wasn’t part of their interview agreement.

“I said OK, ( but) the whole time I had to I figure out how I could get around this,” Gates says of interviews conducted for the four- hour documentar­y, “The Black Church: This Is Our Story, This Is Our Song” ( airing Tuesday and Wednesday, 9 EST/ PST; times may vary).

He evaded the prohibitio­n by innocently asking about their first choir solos. When they named their song titles, he feigned ignorance.

‘ I go, ‘ I don’t know how that goes. Would you mind singing it?’ “he said in a playful, conspirato­rial tone. They did, adding a treat to the two- night presentati­on.

Music plays a central role in the Black church and the documentar­y, which features interviews with Legend, Adams, Jennifer Hudson, BeBe Winans and Pastor Shirley Caesar. It also inspired the title, as “This Is Our Church, This Is Our Song” is a slightly altered lyric from the 1873 hymn, “Blessed Assurance.”

As closely associated as music is with the Black church, it’s just one part of an examinatio­n of the religious, political and cultural institutio­n’s 400year history in America that also features interviews with Oprah Winfrey, Bishop Michael Curry, the Rev. Al Sharpton, the Rev. William Barber II and the Rev. Raphael Warnock, the newly elected U. S. senator from Georgia.

Gates, the host of PBS’ “Finding Your Roots” and a Harvard professor, says the documentar­y’s message of “race and resilience, struggle and redemption, hope and healing” resonates deeply after the events of 2020, which saw the deaths of George Floyd, Breonna Taylor and other Black people at the hands of police officers and a higher rate of COVID- 19 hospitaliz­ations and deaths among people of color, including the Black community.

Legend, who says his exposure to music as a child at his Pentecosta­l church in Springfield, Ohio, inspired his singing career, says the Black church has long been a bulwark in tumultuous times.

“Learning about the resilience and the community that was built in the Black church is an essential part of us understand­ing how Black folks have made it this far in this country when there were so many forces that were conspiring against us doing so,” says Legend, who also is an executive producer. “I do believe that there’s something about all the struggle and the suffering that Black folks have had to endure. So much of the way we’ve interprete­d the Bible and so much of the way we’ve embraced it has been about the struggle.”

“The Black Church,” which goes back hundreds of years to explore the Islamic, Christian and traditiona­l- religion roots of Africans before they were

enslaved in America, details how a “religious foundation­al stew” evolved into a distinctiv­e Christian entity in the U. S., Gates says. In the process, it gave congregant­s needed hope during the brutal oppression of slavery and Jim Crow and the country such leaders as abolitioni­st Frederick Douglass and the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.

“Often, religion is dismissed as being otherworld­ly, but Black people clung to the church so they could believe in the future of their descendant­s here on Earth, that by and by there would be a better day, by and by your grandchild would be free, your greatgrand­child would be free,” Gates says.

Religious belief, including knowledge of Jesus Christ’s concern for the downtrodde­n, has provided an inner strength across generation­s, says Adams, a gospel legend.

“One of the things that I believe

with the slaves and former slaves, they knew that there was something on the inside of them, some type of power that would get them past their present moment,“she says. “So that is why we as African Americans hold on to our faith, no matter what it is, really strong.”

The documentar­y notes flaws in the church, including a male- dominated leadership presiding over a largely female membership and a history of homophobia. However, it mostly celebrates an institutio­n that remains relevant today, Gates says, describing his experience­s at summer services on Martha’s Vineyard as “a circle of warmth.”

Such religious gatherings are “a celebratio­n of our culture, our history, of who we are, of how we got over, how we survived the claustroph­obic madness of hundreds of years of slavery and then a century of Jim Crow and then antiBlack racism that we saw manifest itself at the capital in the last four years under Donald Trump and in the Capitol on Jan. 6,” he said. “It’s that I want to celebrate – in an honest way.”

 ?? PROVIDED BY MCGEE MEDIA ?? Singer Yolanda Adams in PBS’ “The Black Church: This Is Our Story, This Is Our Song.”
PROVIDED BY MCGEE MEDIA Singer Yolanda Adams in PBS’ “The Black Church: This Is Our Story, This Is Our Song.”
 ?? PROVIDED BY LIBRARY OF CONGRESS ?? Members of a Pentecosta­l church are featured in the PBS' documentar­y, “The Black Church: This Is Our Story, This Is Our Song.”
PROVIDED BY LIBRARY OF CONGRESS Members of a Pentecosta­l church are featured in the PBS' documentar­y, “The Black Church: This Is Our Story, This Is Our Song.”

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