Bookmark this item
£17.90
Save 22% | Free UK Delivery
Available - Usually dispatched within 4 days
Available - Usually dispatched within 4 days

Bookmark this item
For those interested in African American religious history
Reveals the truth about conversion in slavery's context
You will gain insight into the roots of Black religion
Conversion is one of the most significant motifs in American church history. From the First and Second Great Awakenings to early twentieth century Pentecostal revivals and contemporary Evangelical movements, conversion in all its extravagant forms is important to the story of religion in America. L. Henry Whelchel takes up this motif of conversion as it relates particularly to enslaved Africans and Black Americans.
He explains the role of conversion in the complex interaction between blacks and whites in America. Beginning with the differences between European and African forms of slavery and the importance of the motif of conversion to white legitimization of the Atlantic slave trade. Whelchel describes the process of slave conversion as one in which slaves were separated from African religion and culture.
He counters the myth that Africans had no history and that African religion was entirely effaced in its American context. He demonstrates the contradictory relationship between Afro-American and Euro-American religion: on the one hand whites prohibited demonstrations of African religion and on the other hand they embraced and adopted these demonstrations of religion in transformed modes with their revivalist Christianity.
According to Whelchel, "as African religion and culture were exposed to western Christianity," there was forged "a new Afro-American religion." Whelchel's exposure of the contradiction between the propaganda used to defend slavery and the actual, historical circumstances of slaves in America is most compelling in his treatment of the role of education as an adjunct to conversion.
He highlights the emergence of laws prohibiting the teaching of slaves and he explores the emergence of the plantation missions--sponsored by mainline southern denominations--to implement an oral method of religious training. He continues with the role of conversion in post-emancipation relations between black and white religion in America, in both the North and South.
Finally, Whelchel chronicles the rise of the CME and the distinctions between the AME and CME, concluding with the seating of the first black CME bishops.
Title
Hell Without Fire
Author
Love Whelchel
Book Format
Paperback
Publisher
Abingdon Press
Published
September 2002
Weight
250g
Page Count
164
Dimensions
15.3 x 22.9 x 1 cm
ISBN
9780687052837
ISBN-10
0687052831
Eden Code
114321
For you
Free delivery on orders over £15