Whither Shall We Go? The Past and Present of Black Churches and the Public Sphere

Journal Title: Religions - Year 2015, Vol 6, Issue 1

Abstract

In this paper, I analyze the contemporary role of the Black Church in the public sphere. Some argue that despite the historical role of the Black Church in addressing racial inequality, it should not be involved in the public sphere, as there should be a clear separation between church and state. I argue that black churches are filling a gap created by the self-help ideology of a neo-liberal era where addressing the outcomes of contemporary racial inequality is left to private sector organizations, such as churches, rather than the federal government. I assert that the Black Church should remain engaged in the public sphere for two reasons: first, black churches are operating in the absence of state welfare rather than as an alternative to it and second, black churches are among the few institutions providing race-specific remedies that have been abandoned in a colorblind era.

Authors and Affiliations

Kendra H. Barber

Keywords

Related Articles

Adorned by Power: The Individualized Experience of the Mojo Bag

In America, no religion better exemplifies the power of the individual than Hoodoo. Within these peripheral communities in the South, enslaved persons created spaces in which individual practitioners could choose which...

An Imperfect Alliance: Feminism and Contemporary Female Buddhist Monasticisms

This essay lays the elaborate textile of feminist discourse alongside the equally rich fabric of contemporary female Buddhist monasticisms, taking note of places the latter has pulled threads from the former, but also...

Strange Bedfellows: Meditations on the Indispensable Virtues of Confusion, Mindfulness and Humor in the Neuroscientific and Cognitive Study of Esoteric and Contemplative Traditions

Several recent publications in the study of esoteric traditions have drawn together insights from scholars of religions and philosophy, contemplative communities, metaphor and conceptual blend theories, cognitive scien...

Prophesying Women and Ruling Men: Women’s Religious Authority in North American Pentecostalism

The issue of religious authority is one of the main reasons why women have been allowed to participate in Pentecostal churches, and why they have been limited. Women are granted access to ministering authority, but not...

Elizabeth Bishop and the Poetry of Meditation

Elizabeth Bishop’s poetry has won the admiration of a number of Christian poets and scholars. This essay argues that one reason for this is Bishop’s subtle engagement with the work of the poet-divines Gerard Manley Hop...

Download PDF file
  • EP ID EP25425
  • DOI https://doi.org/10.3390/rel6010245
  • Views 328
  • Downloads 11

How To Cite

Kendra H. Barber (2015). Whither Shall We Go? The Past and Present of Black Churches and the Public Sphere. Religions, 6(1), -. https://europub.co.uk/articles/-A-25425