A Fire in the Bones: Reflections on African-American Religious HistoryBeacon Press, 1995 - 224 páginas A Fire in the Bones is a fascinating and moving collection of essays from one of America's most prominent scholars of religious history. In his first book since the classic, Slave Religion, Albert Raboteau shows how the active faith of African-Americans shaped their religious institutions and forged the struggle for social justice throughout their history. Covering many traditions - Baptist revivals, the AME Church, Black Catholics, African orisa religions - Raboteau reveals the pervasive faith of African-Americans that God was an actor in their history. This faith has enabled them to challenge America's self-image as "The Promised Land" and to fight the institutions of racism. |
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Página 25
... church generally attended with whites , but some , more than historians have realized , attended separate black churches . We tend to identify the development of the independent black church with free blacks in the North , but the same ...
... church generally attended with whites , but some , more than historians have realized , attended separate black churches . We tend to identify the development of the independent black church with free blacks in the North , but the same ...
Página 87
... church , called " elders and deacons ” under their ecumenical plan of church gov- ernment , now faced the issue of denominational affiliation . According to Allen , the majority favored the Methodists , but the local elder continued to ...
... church , called " elders and deacons ” under their ecumenical plan of church gov- ernment , now faced the issue of denominational affiliation . According to Allen , the majority favored the Methodists , but the local elder continued to ...
Página 93
... Church of Africans , organized by Peter Spencer in Wilmington , Dela- ware ; Allen's African Methodist Episcopal Church ; and the Af- rican Methodist Episcopal Zion Church , founded in New York City in 1821. From bitter experience ...
... Church of Africans , organized by Peter Spencer in Wilmington , Dela- ware ; Allen's African Methodist Episcopal Church ; and the Af- rican Methodist Episcopal Zion Church , founded in New York City in 1821. From bitter experience ...
Contenido
AfricanAmerican | 15 |
Black Destiny in NineteenthCentury America | 37 |
How Far the Promised Land? Black Religion | 57 |
Derechos de autor | |
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Otras ediciones - Ver todas
A Fire in the Bones: Reflections on African-American Religious History Albert J. Raboteau Vista previa limitada - 1996 |
A Fire in the Bones: Reflections on African-American Religious History Albert J. Raboteau Sin vista previa disponible - 1996 |
A Fire in the Bones: Reflections on African-American Religious History Albert J. Raboteau Sin vista previa disponible - 1996 |
Términos y frases comunes
Absalom Jones African Church African-American alienation AME Church Baptist believe Bethel biblical bishops black Americans black Catholics black Christians black church black Methodists black Muslims black protest black religious Catholic Church Catholicism chanted sermon Chris Christianity civil rights claimed colonial color congregation conversion experience culture denominations destiny discrimination divine Egypt elder Elijah Muhammad enslavement Episcopal Ethiopia Evangelical Exodus faith father former slaves Free African Society free blacks freedom God's gospel Grimke historian Holy human Ibid identity Islam Israel James Theodore Holly John Josephite Fathers King's lives Martin Luther King meaning ment ministers mission missionary moral movement myth nation Negro nineteenth century nonviolence oppression organization pastor person Philadelphia Plantevigne prayer preaching priests Promised Land race racial racism redemption rejected religion reprinted Richard Allen ritual Santería Seminary Sisters slavery social South spiritual story struggle style suffering Thomas Merton tion tradition University white Christians William worship York