The Afro-Christian Convention: The Fifth Stream of the United Church of Christ
The Afro-Christian Convention: The Fifth Stream of the United Church of Christ
The Afro-Christian Convention: The Fifth Stream of the United Church of Christ

When
Tuesday, May 30, 2023 at 5:00 PM to 6:30 PM Eastern Standard Time
Email
info@14beacon.org
Contact
The Congregational Library
An online discussion with Rev. Dr. Yvonne Delk, Rev. Brenda Bilips Square, and Rev. Dr. Henry T. Simmons to celebrate the publication of The Afro-Christian Convention: The Fifth Stream of the United Church of Christ.
The holy stream of African spirituality that flowed across the Atlantic Ocean and up into the tidewaters of Virginia in 1619—the same stream that overflowed into the worship and work of the United Church of Christ—is celebrated and given its long-overdue place in the canon of UCC history by Rev. Dr. Delk and contributors to this important volume.
The story of the Afro-Christian Convention is one of faith, survival, and empowerment in the hostile environment of racism. From 1892 to the 1960s, the Afro-Christian Convention was composed of 150 churches and 25,000 members, located primarily in North Carolina and Virginia. In June 1957, when the founding/merging leaders of the new United Church of Christ processed through Cleveland, representation of the Afro-Christian Convention churches was folded into the representation of the Convention of the South—a 1950s initiative of the Congregational Christian denomination to fold Black churches of the South into a single conference.
But the spirit, worldview, worship, and impact of Afro-Christian Convention churches are not appropriately represented under the banner of the Congregational stream of UCC history, a stream informed predominantly by white perspective. The Afro-Christian Convention, born from the wellspring of independent Black churches with deep African rootedness, is rightly understood—and at last shared—as a unique stream.
The event is free to all, but registration is required via this link: https://us06web.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_xK9oTvDzSTaMznySibQ2zA
The holy stream of African spirituality that flowed across the Atlantic Ocean and up into the tidewaters of Virginia in 1619—the same stream that overflowed into the worship and work of the United Church of Christ—is celebrated and given its long-overdue place in the canon of UCC history by Rev. Dr. Delk and contributors to this important volume.
The story of the Afro-Christian Convention is one of faith, survival, and empowerment in the hostile environment of racism. From 1892 to the 1960s, the Afro-Christian Convention was composed of 150 churches and 25,000 members, located primarily in North Carolina and Virginia. In June 1957, when the founding/merging leaders of the new United Church of Christ processed through Cleveland, representation of the Afro-Christian Convention churches was folded into the representation of the Convention of the South—a 1950s initiative of the Congregational Christian denomination to fold Black churches of the South into a single conference.
But the spirit, worldview, worship, and impact of Afro-Christian Convention churches are not appropriately represented under the banner of the Congregational stream of UCC history, a stream informed predominantly by white perspective. The Afro-Christian Convention, born from the wellspring of independent Black churches with deep African rootedness, is rightly understood—and at last shared—as a unique stream.
The event is free to all, but registration is required via this link: https://us06web.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_xK9oTvDzSTaMznySibQ2zA
Link to Additional Information →