The History of the Negro Church

CHAPTER XV

Chapter 1511,244 wordsPublic domain

THE NEGRO CHURCH OF TO-DAY

These new developments have kept the Negro ministry still attractive, but because of many undesirable situations here and there in the church comparatively few young men have, during the last decade or so, aspired to this work. Some young Negroes have learned to look upon the calling as a necessary nuisance. Except in church schools where the preparation for the ministry is an objective, it has often been unusual to find one Negro student out of a hundred aspiring to the ministry, and too often those who have such aspirations represent the inferior intellect of the group, as it happened in the church during the middle ages. So rapidly did the ministry fall into discredit in many quarters a few years ago that most women of promise would not dare to engage themselves to men who thought of becoming clergymen; and, if the marital connection happened to be effected before the lot of the bride was known, it was in many cases considered a calamity. Because Negroes now realize how limited the opportunity for the race is in politics and some of the professions, however, the ministry will doubtless continue, as it has since the Reconstruction, a sort of avenue through which the ambitious youth must pass to secure a hearing and become a man of influence among his people. This does not mean that irreligious men will masquerade as spiritual advisers but that, inasmuch as the church as an institution is considered a welfare agency as well as a spiritual body to edify souls, some Negroes, interested in the social uplift of the race, are learning to accomplish this task by accepting leadership in the church.

Negroes see in the ministry, moreover, a new mission. The world, having now gone mad after the trifles of this life, is sadly in need of a redeemer to save men from themselves. In the contest between selfishness and godliness the former has been victor in the soul of the American and European. There are those like Bishop John Hurst believing that the Negro church must play the rôle of keeping the fire burning on the altar until the day when men again become reverent, and that the Negro's liberal interpretation of the Christian religion, based upon the brotherhood of man and the fatherhood of God, must gain ascendancy and be accepted by a regenerated world of to-morrow.

As a preparation to this end the afflictions of the Negro have adequately developed self-control in the race. The watchword of the Negro church has been patience while waiting on the Lord. The Negro has learned not to avenge his own wrongs, believing that God will adjust matters in the end. The Negro agrees with Professor Joseph A. Booker, that he that taketh up the sword shall perish by the sword. Even during these days, when we learn much about the lawless, the behavior of the Negroes is no exception to the rule. An investigation shows that the Negroes never do any more than to defend themselves in keeping with the first law of nature. White persons who once found it possible to intimidate the whole group by shooting or lynching one or two now face persons of color bent upon defending their homes. At heart, however, the Negro is conservatively Christian and looks forward to that favorable turn in the affairs of man when the wrongs of the oppressed shall be righted without the shedding of blood.

The Negro church is criticized by a few radical members of the race as a hindrance to the immediate achievement of the aims of the race, in that the white race in the exercise of foresight encourages and even subsidizes the Negro ministry in carrying out this conservative program. This will tend, it is said, to keep the Negro down, whereas the white people themselves do not actually believe in such doctrine; for their own actions show that they use it as a means to an end. This, however, is hardly a fair criticism of the Negro church of to-day. No force from without can claim control of this institution, and certainly no one can bridle its fearless speakers who stand for the Negro of to-day. The Negro churchmen, moreover, are not any more conservative than other leaders of the people. They may be more generally effective because of their greater influence. That the Negro church is conservative is due to teaching and to tradition, and it is fortunate that Providence has had it so. Acting as a conservative force among the Negroes, the church has been a sort of balance wheel. It has not been unprogressive but rather wise in its generation in not rushing forward to a radical position in advance of public opinion. In other words, the Negro church has known how far it can safely instruct its people to go in righting their own wrongs, and this conservatism has no doubt saved the Negro from the fate of other oppressed groups who have suffered extermination because of the failure to handle their case more diplomatically.

This does not mean, however, that the Negro church of to-day is not alive to the sufferings of the race and is not critical of the attitude of the so-called Christian elements in this country. Some Negro ministers like Dr. F. J. Grimké are decidedly outspoken, even to the extent of being classed with the militant Reds now being deported. Dr. Pezavia O'Connell, a gentleman of scholarship and character, has all but suffered professional martyrdom because he has always fearlessly championed the cause of the Negro. Inasmuch as such an advanced position does not always harmonize with the faith of his communicants, he has been proscribed in certain circles. R. W. Bagnall, George Frazier Miller, and Byron Gunner have actually preached the use of force and encouraged resistance to the mobs to the extent that some Negroes have probably addressed themselves vindictively to the task of retribution. Through the Negro churches, and these alone, have the Negroes been able to effect anything like a coöperative movement to counteract the evil influences of such combinations against the race as the revived Ku Klux Klan.

The church then is no longer the voice of one man crying in the wilderness, but a spiritual organization at last becoming alive to the needs of a people handicapped by social distinctions of which the race must gradually free itself to do here in this life that which will assure the larger life to come. To attain this the earth must be made habitable for civilized people. Funds are daily raised in Negro churches to fight segregation, and an innocent Negro in danger of suffering injustice at the hands of the local oppressor may appeal with success to the communicants with whom he has frequented a common altar. The National Association for the Advancement of Colored People would be unable to carry out its program without the aid of the Negro church.

Although Negroes are not now attracted to the church as much as formerly, the census reports still show that there are more Negroes in the ministry than in any other profession. The only really close competitor of the Negro in this profession is the southern white man. While the educated white men of the North are taking up scientific pursuits and business, the southern whites are carrying out their designs on the ministry, in keeping with the well-laid plans by which they have succeeded in getting partial control of the northern press. During recent years so many southern white students have crowded northern schools of theology that, in keeping with the spirit of Beelzebub, some of these institutions now deny Negroes admission. The pulpits of the North are being gradually taken over by the apostles indoctrinated by the medieval agents of race hate.

Since the Negro ministry is still the largest factor in the life of this race, it naturally conflicts with the propaganda of the ministry preaching caste. These representatives of the master and slave classes must, in the capacity of spokesmen of widely differing groups, work out the solution of the problems of the church in the United States; for either the one or the other must dictate the religious program of the economically mad North. The North cares little about priest-craft. The struggle there for dollars and cents and for opportunities to spend them in riotous living is too keen to spare time for such matters as Christian living and the remote hereafter. The South, on the other hand, has never lost its bearing. In spite of riots here and there and lynchings almost anywhere, that section still considers itself a Christian land and, in its way, has lifted high the name of Christ without being influenced by his life. The North, then, if it ever awakes from its lethargy, will probably accept either the principles of Jesus of Nazareth as they have been preached and practiced by the Negroes, or the Anglo-Saxon-chosen-people-of-God faith for which many misguided white communicants have jeopardized their own lives and have taken those of Negroes unwilling to worship at the shrine of race prejudice.

The white people of this country are not interested in the real mission of Christ. In the North the church has surrendered to the capitalistic system and developed into an agency seeking to assuage the pains of those suffering from the very economic evils which the institution has not the courage to attack. In the southern portion of the United States, the white churches have degenerated into perfunctory machines engaged in the service of deceiving the multitude with the doctrine that the Anglo-Saxon, being superior to other races by divine ordination, may justly oppress them to maintain its supremacy and that the principles of Jesus are exemplified in the lives of these newly chosen people of God when they permit their so-called inferiors to eat the crumbs let fall by those whom their idol god has carefully selected as the honor guests at the feast. If the humble Nazarene appeared there disturbing the present caste system, he would be speedily lynched as he was in Palestine.

In spite of the Negroes' logical preaching of the fatherhood of God and the brotherhood of man, however, the North now seems inclined to accept the faith of the South. Science has long since uprooted the theory that one race can be superior to another, but the northern churches are loath to act accordingly. The same churches, which prior to emancipation, championed the cause of the Negro, are to-day working indirectly to promote racial distinctions. The southern white man, wiser in his generation than most of his competitors, easily realized that he could not legally reënslave the Negro, but early devised a scheme to convert the North to the doctrine of segregation, educational distinctions, and the elimination of the Negroes from the body politic, to make it improbable, if not impossible, for the Negroes to attain the status of white men. The Christian spirit of the North at first rebelled against the very idea; but, already pledged to the policy of the economic proscription of Negroes through trades unions, that section, once bristling with churches dominated by abolitionists, soon yielded to the temptation of sacrificing the principles of Jesus for dollars and cents. The Negro of to-day, therefore, is hated as much by the northern religious devotee as by the southern enthusiast at the shrine of race prejudice.

Evidence as to such conditions obtaining is not wanting. In the midst of the changing order involving all but the annihilation of the Negro, the race has repeatedly appealed to the "Christian" element of the North only to have a deaf ear turned to its petition. Inasmuch as the northern ministers are influenced by rich laymen whose businesses have so many ramifications in the South, they refrain from such criticism or interference in behalf of the Negro, since it might mean economic loss. Negroes at first secured from northern churches large sums of money to establish adequate private schools and colleges throughout the South, but before these institutions could be developed these funds were diverted to the support of industrial education which the South openly interpreted to signify that no Negro must be encouraged to become the equal of any white man, and that education for him must mean something entirely different from that training provided for the Caucasian. The northern white man, more interested in developing men to produce cotton and tobacco than in the training of a race to think for itself, again bowed to mammon. Churches which once annually raised sums for the maintenance of various Negro schools have now, as a majority, restricted their contributions to Hampton and Tuskegee, where, it is believed, the ultimate distinctions of the whites and blacks can, by the process of safeguarded education, be best effected. Practically all of the so-called Christian philanthropists have followed their example.

The Negro church, however, finds itself facing still another problem. During recent years Negroes have manifested more interest in the redemption of Africa. Negro churches have long since contributed to missions and the periodical return of the apostle to the lowly far away has been awaited with the anticipation of unwonted joy; but it is only recently that the church has begun to make sacrifices for the cause. Whereas a few years ago a congregation felt that it had done its duty in raising a missionary collection of ten or fifteen dollars, that same group is to-day supporting one or two missionaries in Africa. The raising of funds for this purpose and the administration of it have been of late so well extended, as noted above, that the national church organizations have had to assign this work to boards, whose business is to supply the missionaries at the various posts and extend their operations by establishing schools where they have sufficiently well established the work to require systematic training.

In spite of their well-laid plans, however, the Negro church finds itself handicapped in reaching the Africans. Controlled as that continent is by the capitalistic powers of Europe, they have much apprehension as to the sort of gospel the Negro missionary may preach in Africa, lest the natives be stirred up to the point of self-assertion. They desire that missionaries to Africa, like race leaders in the United States, be "hand-picked." In other words, the missionary movement must bow to mammon. To the heathen, then, must go those who have served only as forerunners of foreign conquests involving the discomfiture, the oppression, and in many cases the annihilation of the very people whom they professed to be saving.

Following in their wake, a certain American "Christian" organization financed by "philanthropists" recently sent to Africa Thomas J. Jones who, in behalf of his race, sought to carry out this policy. The effect of this mission was soon apparent. After having nobly served in Africa and India, Max Yergan, an International Young Men's Christian Association Secretary, appointed to serve permanently in Africa, recently toured the United States for a mission fund which the Negroes freely contributed that through him some portion of Africa might be redeemed. This man in Africa having ingratiated himself into the favor of the capitalistic government there, however, according to Yergan's statement, influenced the administration to refuse him the permit to work among his own people. The same meddler, according to a complaint made by the colored branch of the Young Men's Christian Association, all but made himself the dictator of the appointments of that department and other Negro welfare agencies sent abroad during the World War. His business now seems to be that of furnishing the world with "hand-picked" Negro leaders to damn even the natives in Africa. The white church then, has not only failed to preach the social gospel of Jesus, but is preventing the Negroes from carrying that message to their own people. In other words, the principles of the humble Nazarene must be crushed out to make money and perpetuate caste.

This and other handicaps, however, have not prevented the progress of the church. Probably the most promising aspect is that Negro ministers of to-day measure up to a higher standard than formerly. They are not diverted from their course by politics and the like. Here and there, of course, are some of little promise, who in a poverty-stricken condition accept almost any bribe offered them by political bosses, but fortunately this number is known to be rapidly decreasing. During the last generation there has developed among Negroes the feeling that the political embroglio is an unclean sphere which the minister should not enter. The increasing duties of the Negro preachers, moreover, have recently so multiplied that they have no time for such service. Experience has shown that even in the case of those who have gone into politics in self-defense that they have accomplished little good or that some layman could have handled the matter more successfully.

We have recently had two striking cases in evidence. Bishop Alexander Walters, after having rendered valuable service to the cause as an educator and minister in Kentucky, California, and Tennessee, became the ranking bishop of the African Methodist Episcopal Zion Church. He then decided that his people had been so long duped by the grafters and tricksters masquerading as the successors of Lincoln and Grant, that he would use his influence to have the Negroes divide their vote by supporting Woodrow Wilson in 1912. Dr. J. Milton Waldron, an influential Baptist minister of Washington, feeling that it would mean a new day for the Negro to have this democratic college president of many promises elevated to the headship of the nation by the aid of the Negro vote, did likewise. Disappointed in the end, however, by the hypocrisy of Wilson, who, in his heart hated Negroes, these churchmen saw themselves painfully humiliated among their people, who, in return for the large number of votes which they gave Wilson, received nothing but segregation in the civil service, elimination from public office, and conscription to do forced labor in the World War, while he was promising that the Negroes should have justice and have it abundantly.

The Negro churchmen of to-day realize, as most leaders of the race do, that the hope of the blacks lies not in politics from without but in race uplift from within in the form of social amelioration and economic development. Neither Democrats nor Republicans are interested in the Negro except so far as the race may be used to enable them to get into office. Their platform promises have been not something to stand on but to get into office on. This does not in any sense, however, mean that the Negro minister has lost interest in public matters of concern to every citizen, but rather that he has learned the possibilities in the political world. He will in no sense withdraw from the contest in behalf of the rights of his people. His method of attack will be different. Carrying out this reconstructed policy for the rehabilitation of the race, the Negro minister, like a majority of the thinking members of this group to-day, will welcome the assistance and coöperation of the white man, but will not suffer himself to be used as a tool in connection with forces from without the circles of the race, pretending to be interested in the solution of its problems.

FOOTNOTES

[Footnote 1: At a love feast conducted by Bishop Asbury at the Virginia Conference in 1783, strong testimonials were borne in favor of African liberty. He said in 1785, speaking of the Virginia Conference: "I found the minds of the people greatly agitated with our rules against slavery and a proposed petition to the General Assembly for the emancipation of the blacks. A colonel and Dr. Coke disputed on the subject and the colonel used some threats; next day brother O'Kelly let fly at them, and they were made angry enough; we, however, came off with whole bones." Working in this field against slavery, these Methodists waited upon George Washington, who politely received them and gave his opinion against slavery. This conference, however, did not bring striking results. Saying that he was much pained in mind, Bishop Asbury asserted: "I am brought to conclude that slavery will exist in Virginia perhaps for ages. There is not a _sufficient sense of religion nor liberty to destroy it_." In Georgia in 1741 he said, "Away with the false cant that the better you use the Negroes, the worse they will use you! Make them good; then, teach them the fear of God, and learn to fear him yourselves, ye masters. I understand not the doctrine of cruelty."]

[Footnote 2: He published a pamphlet entitled _Involuntary, Unmerited, Perpetual, Absolute, Hereditary Slavery, examined on the principles of Nature, Reason, Justice, Policy, and Scripture_. The work is written in grave and manly style and with nice discriminations and candid reasons set forth the claims of the emancipating Baptists in a creditable manner.

In 1778, Mr. Barrow received an invitation to preach at the house of a gentleman who lived on Nansemond River, near the mouth of James River. A ministering brother accompanied him. They were informed on their arrival, that they might expect rough usage, and so it happened. A gang of well-dressed men came up to the stage, which had been erected under some trees, as soon as the hymn was given out, and sang one of their obscene songs. They then undertook to plunge both of the preachers. Mr. Barrow was plunged twice. They pressed him into the mud, held him long under the water, and came near drowning him. In the midst of their mocking, they asked him if he believed? and throughout treated him with the most barbarous insolence and outrage. His companion they plunged but once. The whole assembly was shocked, the women shrieked, but no one durst interfere; for about twenty stout fellows were engaged in this horrid measure. They insulted and abused the gentleman who invited them to preach, and every one who spoke a word in their favor. Before these persecuted men could change their clothes, they were dragged from the house, and driven off by these outrageous churchmen. But three or four of them died in a few weeks, in a distracted manner, and one of them wished himself in hell before he had joined the company, &c.

In Mr. Barrow's piece against slavery, we find the following note: "To see a man (a Christian) in the most serious period of all his life--making his last will and testament--and in the most solemn manner addressing the Judge of all the earth--_In the name of God, Amen._--Hearken to him--he will very shortly appear before the Judge, where kings and slaves have equal thrones!--He proceeds:

"Item. I give and bequeath to my son ----, a negro man named ----, a negro woman named ---- with five of her youngest children.

"Item. I give and bequeath to my daughter ----, a negro man named ----, also a negro woman named ----, with her three children.

"Item. All my other slaves, whether men, women or children, with all my stock of horses, cattle, sheep, and hogs, I direct to be sold to the highest bidder, and the monies arising therefrom (after paying my just debts) to be equally divided between my two above-named children!!!

"The above specimen is not exaggerated; the like of it often turns up. And what can a real lover of the rights of man say in vindication thereof?

"Suppose for a moment, that the testator, or if the owner, dies intestate (which is often the case), was ever so humane a person, who can vouch for their heirs and successors? This consideration, if nothing else, ought to make all slaveholders take heed what they do, 'for they must give an account of themselves to God.'"]

[Footnote 3: Departing under similar circumstances at the same time, went Rev. Mr. Amos, a product of the same Christian environment, directing his course to New Providence, Bahama Islands, British West Indies, where he established a flourishing Baptist Church.]

[Footnote 4: When he purchased the property for the Bethel Church on Lombard Street near Sixth and the majority of the committee refused to accept, Allen having given his word so to do, kept it at a great personal loss.]

[Footnote 5: A man of fair education, Willis was a power in that State as early as 1798. We hear of him in Louisiana in 1804. Mississippi sent two ministers to ordain him in Louisiana in 1812. He organized later the Louisiana Baptist Association and was chosen as its moderator in 1837.]

[Footnote 6: "In all of his journeyings," says a contributor to the _Baptist Magazine_, "he seemed to go among the people in the fullness of the blessings of the Gospel of Christ. He was not indeed an ordinary man, for without those advantages of good education in early life, he became distinguished as a preacher. His understanding was vigorous, his imagination was vivid, his personal appearance was interesting and his elocution was grateful. We have heard him preach to an audience of more than 1000 persons when he seemed to have the complete command of their feelings for an hour together. On baptismal occasions he was truly eloquent. His arguments were unanswerable, and his appeals to the heart were powerful. The slow and gentle manner in which he placed candidates under the water, and raised them up again, produced an indelible impression on the spectators, that they had indeed seen the burial with Christ in baptism. Near the close of his career in 1831 when he finally died of a painful illness, he bore striking testimony to his faith in Jesus. His mind being 'wonderfully sustained by the consolations of the Gospel,' he said on one occasion to a friend, 'Since I saw you last I have been happy in God--my sky has been without a cloud. I know that when the earthly house of my tabernacle is dissolved, I have a house not made with hands, eternal in the heavens.' When asked at another time if he had a good hope through grace, O, said he, I am altogether unworthy, but trust in him 'who of God is made unto me wisdom, righteousness, sanctification and redemption.' After a short pause, he observed, 'I know in whom I have believed, and that he is able to keep that which I have committed unto him until that day.' When his sufferings were great, and he felt as if he were dying, he would say in broken accents, 'Come--Lord--Jesus--come quickly.' But he would add, 'I pray for patience.' He frequently repeated, 'I know that my Redeemer liveth. Whom I shall see for myself, and mine eyes shall behold, and not another.' On his daughter's observing what a fine day it was, and how calm the water was, he said smiling, 'Just like my mind, my dear--not a wave--unruffled.' One morning being asked how he had rested the preceding night, he replied, 'The Lord has spared my life one night longer; but I never longed for any thing so really, as to die and to be with my Saviour.' Towards the close of his last sickness, he exclaimed with emphasis and a voice stronger than usual--'I am now ready to be offered up and the time of my departure is at hand. I have fought a good fight, I have finished my course, I have kept the faith; henceforth there is laid up for me a crown of righteousness, which the Lord the righteous Judge, shall give me at that day.'"]

[Footnote 7: There appeared later between 1830 and 1840 others of much worth. These were Charles A. Boyd, Henry Johnson, William H. Bishop, Hosea Easton, James Simmons, Henry Drayton, David Blake, Adam Ford, Daniel Vandevier, Francis P. Graham, John W. Lewis, George Garnett, William Fuller, J. H. Williams, William Serrington, John A. King, John Tappen, John Dungy, Richard Noyee, Peter Ross, John Lyle, John P. Thompson, John Chester, Nathan Blunt, John N. Mars, J. B. Johnson, Thomas James, Edward Bishop, Thomas Jackson, Dempsey Kennedy, William Tilmon, George Washington, Benjamin Simms, W. L. Brown, John Wells, Samuel Serrington, George A. Spywood, Jesse Kemble, Leonard Collins, Basil McKall, William Jones, John Jackson, Abraham Cole, Samuel T. Gray, William McFarlan, Philip Lum, Shadrach Golden, and Abraham Miller.]

[Footnote 8: The Assembly bore it grievously that slavery exhibits the persons of color as dependent on the will of others, "whether they shall know and worship the true God, whether they shall enjoy the ordinances of the gospel; whether they shall perform the duties and cherish the endearments of husbands and wives, parents and children, neighbors and friends; whether they shall preserve their chastity and purity, or regard the dictates of justice and humanity." ... "The evils to which the slave is always exposed often take place in fact, and in their very worst degree and form; and where all of them do not take place, as we rejoice to say in many instances, through the influence of the principles of humanity and religion on the mind of masters, they do not--still the slave is deprived of his natural right, degraded as a human being, and exposed to the danger of passing into the hands of a master who may inflict upon him all the hardships and injuries which humanity and avarice may suggest.

"From this view of the consequences resulting from the practice into which Christian people have most inconsistently fallen, of enslaving a portion of their brethren of mankind--for 'God hath made of one blood all nations of men to dwell on the face of the earth'--it is manifestly the duty of all Christians who enjoy the light of the present day, when the inconsistency of slavery, both with the dictates of humanity and religion, has been demonstrated, and is generally seen and acknowledged, to use their honest, earnest, and unwearied endeavors, to correct the errors of former times, and as speedily as possible to efface this blot on our holy religion, and to obtain the complete abolition of slavery through Christendom, and if possible throughout the world."]

[Footnote 9: The following is a specimen:

DEAR SIR:--My woman, Clarissa Hill, has expressed a wish to unite herself in Christian communion with the church of which you are the acting minister. She is a most faithful servant, and one, of whom it affords me pleasure to say, that I believe she endeavors to conform to the great principles of her faith, and I believe she will be an exemplary and honorable member of your church, should you think proper to receive her as such. She has belonged to me for sixteen years, during which time her conduct has been most unexceptionably moral, and therefore, I cheerfully consent to her being baptized and admitted to your communion.

Very respectfully, etc.,

C. S. M.]

[Footnote 10: Three years later this convention sent six missionaries to Africa. These were J. H. Pressly, W. W. Cooley together with their wives, J. J. Coles and H. McKinney. The National Convention was organized in 1880, out of a protest against the attitude of certain whites toward the Negroes and they have since continued as a separate body having a publishing house of their own rather than patronize the American Baptist Publication Society.]

INDEX

Abbott, Lyman, interest of, in the freedmen, 212

Abrams, Joseph, a Negro preacher in Richmond, 163

Adams, Henry, pioneer Negro preacher in Louisville, 119

Adams, J. B., pastor of the Concord Baptist Church, 282

Afflictions, the effect of, 301-302

Africa, missionary work in, impeded, 309-311

African Civilization Society, the, achievements of, 211-212

A. M. E. Church, the establishment of, 72-78; troubles of, with the Zionites, 81-85; schools of, 205; educational program, 212

A. M. E. Zion Church, the beginnings of, 78-85; indecision of, 81-85; struggles of, 82-84; schism in, 106-107; schools of, 206

African Union First Colored Methodist Protestant Church of America, established, 192

African Union Church organized, 107

Alabama, Negro churches in, 118; reactionary laws of, 132; Presbyterians in, 155, 156-157

Alexander, Dr. A., a friend of John Gloucester, 66

Allen, Richard, the work of, 73-78; recognition of, 73; early efforts, 74-75; elected bishop, 76; death of, 101

Allen University, the establishment of, 205

Allensworth, Allen, religious work of, 229; in politics, 229-230

Ambrose, F., a pioneer C. M. E. worker, 196

American Baptist Home Mission Association, efforts of, 209

American Baptist Home Mission Society, the, achievements of, 203, 209-210; the attack on, 261-264

American Freedmen's Aid Commission, the work of, 212

American Freedmen's Union Commission, the establishment of, 213

American Missionary Association, schools of, 203-204

American Union Commission, the, achievements of, 212-213

Americans, unfavorable attitude of, 41

Anderson, I. H., a pioneer C. M. E. preacher, 196

Anderson, Thomas, a preacher in Savannah, 116

Anderson, William, a supporter of Richard Allen, 76

Andrew, Governor John A., a friend of the freedmen, 213

Andrew, a pioneer Negro teacher in Charleston, 8-9

Anglican clergy, the attitude of, 20-24; corruption, 20, 21, 22

Anthony Street Church, establishment of, in Mobile, 135

Arnett, Bishop B. W., religious work of, 236; in politics, 235-236; effort of, to repeal "Black Laws," 236

Asbury, Bishop, the position of, 26, 28; work of, 28-30; recognition of Richard Allen by, 73

Ashmun Institute, the establishment of, 152

Atkinson, Edward, a friend of the freedmen, 213

Auchmutty, the work of, among Negroes in New York, 14

Austin, J. C., a popular preacher in Pittsburg, 282

Babbit, Bessie, white wife of Lemuel Haynes, 63

Bacon, Thomas, sermons of, on the instruction of Negroes, 23, 151-152

Bacote, S. W., a preacher in Missouri, 277-278

Bagnall, R. W., a social welfare minister, 277; advanced position of, 304

Ballou, Hosea, contest of, with Lemuel Haynes, 64

Baltimore, Baptist churches in, 111; Association for the moral and Educational Improvement of the Colored People of, the efforts of, 208, 211

Baptists, early progress of, 85-91, 107-122, 298; reason for growth of, 108-109, 110; in the North, 120-122; statistics of schools of, 206; statistics of, 286, 296; division and increase of Negro Baptists, 256-257

Baptist Association of Western States and Territories, 200

Baptist conventions, the rise of, 199-201

Baptist Foreign Mission Convention, 201

Baptist Home Missionary Society, the American, the work of, 203, 209-210

Baptists (white) the Emancipating, 32-36

Baptists (white) the work of, among Negroes, 31-36; position in 1789, 32; anti-slavery work of, 32-36; the schism of, 130; interest of, in the Negro, 160

Baptized Licking-Locust Association, 36

Barclay, T., the work of, in New York, 15

Barnett, Nelson, a pioneer Baptist preacher of West Virginia, 240

Barrow, David, the position of, 33-34

Bartow, the work of, among Negroes, 11

Baxter, Richard, ideas of, carried out, 16

Beach, J., the work of, among Negroes, 16-17

Beckett, the work of, in Pennsylvania, 11

Beebe, J. A., a bishop of the C. M. E. Church, 196

Beecher, H. W., interest of, in the freedmen, 212

Benezet, Anthony, a worker among Negroes in Philadelphia, 18

Bentley, George, a pioneer Negro preacher in Tennessee, 137

Bethel Church, organization of, 75

Bible, influence of, among Negroes, 266-272

Biddle University, the establishment of, 203

Binga, Anthony, a useful minister in Richmond, 240

Bishop, Bishop, election of, 106; schismatic connection of, 106-107

Bishop, Josiah, a Negro Baptist preacher among whites, 54-55

Bishops of England, interested in proselyting the Negroes, 6-7

Black Code, 5

Black Harry, a pioneer Methodist Negro preacher, 56-58

"Black Laws" of Ohio, efforts to have them repealed, 236

Blackburn, Gideon, master of John Gloucester, 66-67

Book Concern of the A. M. E. Church, established, 102

Booker, J. A., an educator, 206; opinion of, 302

Boone, L. W., a preacher of power in North Carolina, 240

Boston, the Negro Baptists in, 121

Boucher, Jonathan, the words of, 23-24

Boulden, J. F., in politics, 227-228; religious efforts of, 227

Bowen, J. W. E., a prominent candidate for bishop, 299

Bowling, R. H., a preacher of renown in Norfolk, 282

Boyd, R. H., head of the National Baptist Publishing House, 261, 297

Bradby, a social welfare minister, 277

Braxton, P. H. A., religious effort of, 228-229; in politics, 229

Bray, Dr. Thomas, the mission of, 10

British, favorable attitude of, 41

Brooks, Bishop Sampson, a popular social preacher, 278

Brooks, Philip, interest of, in the freedmen, 212

Brooks, Walter H., quotation from, 41-42; the education of, 217; attack of, on white Baptists, 261

Brooks, W. H., a Methodist minister in New York, 277

Brown, Marcus, a co-worker of Morris Brown, 76

Brown, Morris, a pioneer African Methodist preacher in South Carolina, 76; elected bishop of A. M. E. Church, 101

Brown, William, a pioneer in the A. M. E. Zion Church, 78

Brown, W. W., popular pastor in New York, 278

Browne, W. W., a minister in business, 267

Bryan, Andrew, efforts of, in Savannah, 43, 47-53; persecution of, 49-52

Bryan, Jonathan, master of Andrew Bryan, 49; his friend, 50

Bryan, Sampson, brother and co-worker of Andrew Bryan, 49-50

Bryant, Ira T., a publisher, 297

Bryant, William C., interest of, in the freedmen, 212

Bryce, John, a preacher to Negroes, 160, 164

Bull, Henry, a co-worker of Morris Brown, 76

Bumstead, Horace, an educator, 215

Burling, William, interest of, in Negroes, 18

Burns, Francis, a Negro made bishop to Africa by the Methodists, 189

Burroughs, N. H., the achievements of, 206

Burrows, pastor of the African Baptist Church in Philadelphia, 87

Burt, Thomas, a supporter of the work in Savannah, 48

Buxton, Fowell, a comment of, 27

Caesar, a pioneer Negro Baptist preacher, 137

Cain, Bishop R. H., religious work of, 234-235; in politics, 234-235; a member of Congress, 234

Call of politics, 220-246

Cameron, Paul C., quotation from, on John Chavis, 68-69

Camp meetings among Negro Methodists, 144-145

Campbell, Alexander, sermon of, in Andrew Marshall's church, 114; trouble resulting from, 114, 115

Campbell, General, a friend of George Liele, 45

Campbell, William J., successor to Andrew Marshall, 117

Camphor, A. P., a Methodist missionary bishop, 299

Capucin monks, protest of, 3

Carroll, Richard, a preacher of social welfare tendency, 278

Carter, R. A., a bishop of the C. M. E. Church, 240

Cary, Lott, sketch of, 137-140; ordained to preach, 139; work of, in Liberia, 139-140; death of, 140; interest of, in religious instruction, 160

Casas, las, a missionary, 2; attitude of, on slavery, 2

Caste in the white church, 306-309

Catholics working among Negroes, 1-6; appeal to Negroes a failure, 98; attraction of Negroes by, 256

Challenge to the Negro in freedom, 168

Change in worship advocated, 254-255

Chapman, James, a co-worker of Richard Allen, 75

Charleston, a Negro school in, 8-9; Morris Brown's work in, 77; fracas in church, in, 133-134; Negro churches of, demolished, 134; Presbyterians of, interested in the instruction of Negroes, 155

Charlton, the work of, among Negroes in New York, 14

Chase, Salmon P., interest of, in freedmen, 213

Chavis, John, an educated Negro teacher and preacher, 67-69

Christian, W., pastor of a Negro Baptist Church in Toronto, 122

Christian character emphasized, 252

"Christianity" of the whites, a farce in modern times, 306-309

Church management, questioned, 254

Churchill, W. P., one of the pioneer C. M. E. workers, 196

Civil War, the, and the church, 185-201; an upheaval, 188

Clair, M. W., a bishop of the M. E. Church, 299

Clarke, James Freeman, a friend of the freedmen, 213

Clayton, Moses C., a pioneer Baptist preacher in Baltimore, 111, 136

Cleaves, N. C., a bishop of the C. M. E. Church, 240

Coke, Bishop, the position of, 26

Coker, Daniel, a pioneer preacher in the A. M. E. Church, 75-76; elected bishop, 76; resigned, 76; work of, in Baltimore, 76

Cole, Abraham, a preacher of power, 104

Coleman, Elihu, interest of, in Negroes, 18

Colgan, the work of, in New York, 14

Collins, Leonard, a pioneer preacher in the A. M. E. Zion Church, 104

Colonization Society, the American, opposed, 170

Colored Cumberland Presbyterian Church organized, 192

Colored Methodist Episcopal Church organized, 193-197; unfair criticism of, 193-194

Columbus, missionary spirit of, 1

Conflict of sects, 19-20

Congregationalists, interest of, in Negroes, 99; small following, 99; promotion of education by, 203-204; attract Negroes later, 256

Conservative and progressive in the Negro church, 247-265

Consolidated American Baptist Missionary Convention, 200

Control of Negro church, desired by whites, 278-280

Cook, Steven A., a friend of George Liele, 46

Cooke, John F., founder of the Fifteenth Street Presbyterian Church, 136

Coöperation taught through the church, 284, 285

Coppin, Bishop L. J., foreign mission work of, 296-297

Corpew, E. G., a preacher in Portsmouth, 135

Cottrell, Elias, a bishop of the C. M. E. Church, 240

Coxe, General, attitude of, toward the teaching of slaves, 164

Crockett, J. W., denominational work of, 297

Cruikshanks, Amos, a co-worker of Morris Brown, 76

Crummell, Alexander, the struggles of, 176-177; interest of, in civil rights, 238

Cuff, Peter, a supporter of Richard Allen, 76

Cunningham, Henry, a co-worker with Andrew Marshall, 113

Curry, J. L. M., work of, 214

Cutler, Dr., a missionary in Boston, 17

D'Alone, M., supporter of Negro and Indian Missions, 10

Davis, Edward, a friend of Andrew Bryan, 48

Davis, Noah, a pioneer Baptist preacher in Baltimore, 111, 136

Dawn, the, of a new day, 23-39

DeBaptiste, Richard, a pioneer Baptist preacher in the Northwest Territory, 122; religious work of, 241-242

DeBerry, W. N., church of, socialized, 277

Derrick, Bishop W. B., religious work of, 231; in politics, 231-232

Development, the early, of the Negro church, 100-122

Devous, John, a preacher in Savannah, 116

Differing ideas in the Negro church, 247-265

Difficulties, the, of missions, 19-22

District of Columbia, Negro churches in, 110-111, 136

Dixwell Avenue Congregational Church, establishment of, 99

Dover Baptist Association, received Negro church, 135

Dow, Lorenzo, sermon of, in Andrew Bryan's church, 49

Drayton, Henry, a co-worker of Morris Brown, 76

Drummond, Hugh, the escape of a slave preacher from, 72

Durham, Clayton, a co-worker of Richard Allen, 75

Early development of the Negro Church, 100-122

Eden, James, a co-worker of Morris Brown, 76

Education, a concern of the Negro preacher, 168

Edwards, Mrs., interest of, in proselyting Negroes, 7

Eliot, John, interest of, in slaves, 15

Ellis, Harrison, a Negro preacher in Alabama, 140-142

Episcopalians, interest of, in Negroes, 94-97; attitude of, toward Negroes, 150-152; assistance of, given freedmen, 210-211; attract Negroes, 256

Evangelical sects, work of, 23-29; appeal of, successful, 143-144

Evans, Henry, a pioneer Negro preacher in North Carolina, 56

Farrand, Daniel, teacher of Lemuel Haynes, 63

Finley, J. B., the successor of John Stewart, 60-61

First Colored Methodist Protestant Church organized, 107

Fisk University, the establishment of, 203

Fleetwood, Bishop, sermon of, on the conversion of Negroes, 9

Foreign mission and the Negro church, 296, 297

Foreign relief to freedmen, 208

Ford, J. E., church institutional work of, 276

Fox, George, attitude of, toward freedom and enlightenment, 18

France, decrees of, as to indoctrinating slaves, 3

Francis, Henry, a Negro preacher in Savannah, 52

Fray, S. T., a pioneer preacher in the A. M. E. Zion Church, 104

Frazer, Garrison, a pastor in Savannah, 117

Free African Society, organization of, 75; comment of, 92

Free-Will Baptists, the achievements of, 203, 209

Freedmen Aid Societies, the work of, 208-209

Freedmen Aid Society, the, of the Methodist Church, the establishment of, 209

Freedmen's Bureau, facts from, 208

French, missionary spirit of, 1

Friends, the relief work of, 207-208; the Society of, in England, the efforts of, 208

Friends' Association of Philadelphia, for the relief of colored Freedmen, the work of, 207

Friends' Association for the Aid and Elevation of the Freedmen, 208

Frink, S., a missionary in Georgia, 11

Fugitive Slave Law, effect of, on the migration of Negroes, 122

Galbreth, George, election of, as bishop, 105-106; dispute concerning, 106

Gales, G. W., in politics, 226; religious efforts of, 226

Galphin, George, patron of the Silver Bluff Church, 42

Garnett, Henry Highland, the career of, 175-176

Garretson, Freeborn, attitude of, on Negro conversion, 28

Garrison, William L., interest of, in relief of freedmen, 212

George, David, pastor of the Silver Bluff Church, 42; work of, in Nova Scotia, 42; in Sierre Leone, 42

Georgia, the instruction of Negroes in, 10-11; Negro Baptists in, 112-118; reactionary laws of, 132; Presbyterians of, interested in the Negro, 155, 157

Gibbs, Thomas, the escape of a slave preacher from, 72

Gibson, Bishop, interested in proselyting Negroes, 7; letters of, 7

Gillfield Baptist Church, Petersburg, establishment of, 136

Gilliard, Nicholson, a supporter of Richard Allen, 76

Gloucester, John, a pioneer Presbyterian preacher, 65-67

Goff, Lyman B., interested in the preaching of Charles T. Walker, 245

Goose Creek Parish, Negroes of, instructed, 7

Graham, Solon, an early C. M. E. minister, 196

Graham, W. F., a minister in business, 267

Grant, Bishop, a useful churchman, 238

Great, Evans, a preacher in Savannah, 112, 113

Green, A. R., an editor and Book Steward, 102

Green, Beriah, a friendly teacher of Negroes, 175, 176

Gregg, David, interested in the preaching of Charles T. Walker, 245

Gregg, Jacob, an Emancipating Baptist, 35

Grimes, Leonard, sketch of, 180-182

Grimké, F. J., position of, 303

Grouch, Job, a C. M. E. worker, 196

Growth of the Negro church, 286-299

Guy, Rev. Mr., a preacher to Negroes, 8

Gunner, Byron, the advanced position of, 304

Haig, Mrs., interest of, in proselyting Negroes, 7

Hale, Edward Everett, a friend of the freedmen, 213

Hall, C., preaching of, to Negroes, in North Carolina, 10

Hall, Stephen, a supporter of Richard Allen, 76

Hamilton, Leroy, the master of Henry Francis, 52

Hamilton, William, a pioneer in the A. M. E. Zion Church, 78-79

Hampton Institute, the establishment of, 204

Hanover Presbytery, John Chavis a missionary for, 68

Harden, Henry, troubles of, with the A. M. E. Zion Church, 82-83

Harding, Henry, a supporter of Richard Allen, 75-76

Harper, Alexander, a co-worker of Morris Brown, 76

Harry, a Negro teacher in Charleston, 8-9

Haversham, Justice James, favorable to Andrew Bryan, 49-50

Hawkins, Gen. Rush C., interested in the preaching of Charles T. Walker, 245

Hawkins, John R., a business man in the church, 267

Hawthorne Keidor, a preacher to Negroes in Mobile, 135

Hayes, Gregory W., the work of, 206; conflict of, with the American Baptist Home Mission Society, 262

Haygood, A. G., a friend of the freedmen, 213

Haynes, Lemuel, a scholarly Negro preacher to whites, 62-65

Henderson, Archibald, a student under John Chavis, 70

Henderson, John, a student under John Chavis, 70

Henderson, J., a preacher in Philadelphia, 121

Hepburn, John, a worker among Negroes, 18

Hogarth, George, election of as A. M. E. Book Steward, 102

Hogg, Kate, a member of the Savannah African Church, 45

Holly, J. T., the record of, 179-180

Holmes, Donald, an emancipating Baptist, 35

Holsey, L. H., an early C. M. E. preacher, 196; elected bishop, 196; work of, 239-240

Home missions of the Negro church, 295-296

Honyman, J., the efforts of, among Negroes, 17

Hood, Bishop James W., the religious work of, 236; in politics, 236-238

Hopkins, Samuel, the interest of, in Negroes, 36

Houston, U. L., a pastor in Savannah, 117

Howard, O. O., an educator, of freedmen, 215

Howard University, the establishment of, 204

Huddlestone, work of, in New York, 14

Hunt, Rev. Mr., a teacher of Negroes, 8

Hurst, Bishop John, the faith of, 301

Illinois, Negro Baptists in, 122

Independent church movement, 71-99

Intelligent people lost to the church, 255-256; welcomed by others, 256

Jack, Uncle, a pioneer Negro preacher in Virginia, 55-56

Jackson, Anderson, an early C. M. E. minister, 196

Jackson, Edward, a supporter of Richard Allen, 76

Jackson, William, a preacher in Philadelphia, 121

Jackson, Tennessee, C. M. E. Church organized at, 195-196

Jacksonville, Florida, Negro Baptist church in, 118-119

Jacob, a slave preacher, the escape of, 72

Jacobs, Francis, a pioneer in the A. M. E. Zion Church, 78-79

Jamaica, the work of George Liele in, 43-46

James, Thomas, an anti-slavery preacher, 173

Jasper, John, a popular Baptist preacher, 238-239

Jaudan, Rev. J., a preacher to Negroes in Florida, 118

Jenny, Rev. Mr., the work of, among Negroes, 11

Jernagin, W. H., a social welfare minister in Washington, 278

John Street Methodist Episcopal Church, troubles of, 78, 83-84

Johnson, Adam, pastor of a schismatic church in Savannah, 114

Johnson, Dr., a worker at Stratford, 17

Johnson, D. L., a teacher of contrabands, 215

Johnson, Harvey, attack of, on white Baptists, 261

Johnson, Henry, a pioneer preacher in the A. M. E. Zion Church, 104

Johnson, Bishop J. Albert, foreign mission work of, 296-297

Johnson, M. W., a rising preacher in the Baptist Church, 282

Johnson, Robert, a pastor of Baptists in Washington, D. C., 282

Johnson, W. B., a Baptist preacher in the District of Columbia, 240

Johnson, Bishop W. D., an A. M. E. minister of educational tendencies, 278

Jones, Absalom, a co-worker of Richard Allen, 74; differing ideas of, 75; rector of St. Thomas, 75, 94

Jones, C. C., interest of, in the enlightenment of Negroes, 153-155

Jones, Joshua H., a substantial supporter of Wilberforce, 264

Jones, R. E., a bishop of the M. E. Church, 299

Jones, Thomas, escape of a slave preacher from, 72

Jones, William, a pioneer C. M. E. worker, 196

Jordan, L. G., interest of, in business, 282; foreign mission work of, 296

Keith, George, promoter of religious training, 18

Kennedy, Dempsey, an anti-slavery preacher, 173

Kentucky, the Emancipating Baptists in, 34-36; Negro Baptists in, 119-120

Kirkland, Colonel, a friend of George Liele, 44, 45

Lambert, William, a pioneer Methodist preacher, 81; troubles with the A. M. E. Zion Church, 81; relations with Richard Allen, 80-82

Lane, Isaac, a bishop of the C. M. E. Church, 240

Lane, John W., a C. M. E. worker, 196

Lane College, the establishment of, 203

Latin element, missionary spirit of, 2

Law, Josiah, a preacher to Negroes, 155

Lawton, Bristol, a minister in Savannah, 117

Leadership in the Negro church, 280-281

Lee, George W., achievements of, 244

Lee, Bishop, President of Wilberforce, 238

Legislation, reactionary, 131-132

Lemon, William, a Negro Baptist preacher in Virginia, 53

Lexington, Kentucky, the Baptist Church in, 86; Negro Baptist Church in, 119

Liberty County, Georgia, instruction of Negroes in, 165

Liele, George, preacher at the Silver Bluff Church, 42; efforts of, in Savannah, 43-45; in Jamaica, 44-45

Lincoln University, development of, 203

Lindsay, the work of, in New Jersey, 12

Literature for religious instruction, 166

Livingston College, the establishment of, 205-206

Locke, a white minister interested in Thomas Paul, 88

Locke, John, the philosophy of, influential, 25

Locke, Richard, the work of, among Negroes, 11

London Freedmen's Aid Society, the work of, 208

Lott Cary Convention, organization, 262-263

Love, E. K., a popular preacher in Georgia, 240

Louisville, Negro Baptists in, 119

MacIntosh County, Georgia, instruction of Negroes in, 165

Macsparran, Dr., a worker among Negroes at Narragansett, 17

McClaskey, John, an adviser of the A. M. E. Zion Church, 79

McDonald, James, a co-worker with Negroes in Florida, 118

McKall, Basil, a preacher of power, 104

McLemore, James, an evangelist among Negroes, 137

McQueen, Steven, a preacher in Savannah, 116

McTyeire, interest of, in the Colored Methodist, 195

Management of the Church, the, questioned, 254

Manchester, Virginia, large Negro Baptist church in, 111-112

Manly, Governor Charles, a student under John Chavis, 70

Mangum, P. H., a student under John Chavis, 69

Mangum, W. P., a student under John Chavis, 69

Manning, J. M., a friend of the freedmen, 213

Mars, John N., an anti-slavery Methodist preacher, 173

Marsh, Jacob, a supporter of Richard Allen, 76

Marshall, Abraham, organizer of the Savannah Baptist Church, 48

Marshall, Andrew, a noted Baptist preacher in Savannah, 112; troubles of, 113-115; work of, 112-118

Martin, J. C., denominational work of, 297

Martin J. Sella, an eloquent preacher, 238

Maryland, Catholic workers among Negroes in, 4-5

Massachusetts Episcopal Association, the efforts of, 211

Mather, Cotton, interest of, in slaves, 15-16

Matthews, John, a co-worker of Morris Brown, 76

Mayo, A. D., the efforts of, 214

Meacham, J. B., a pioneer Negro preacher in St. Louis, 120

Meade, Bishop, interest of, in the instruction of Negroes, 151-152

Methodist and Baptist attract Negroes, 196-197, 217

Methodists, African, in the North, 120-122; school statistics of, 203

Methodist Episcopal Church, position on slavery in 1784, 29; pioneer work among Negroes, 26-31; division of, on slavery, 123-124; interest of, in Negro uplift, 158-159; in the Civil War, 186-187, 189-192; attitude of, toward the Negroes, 188-192, 258-259; qualified recognition of Negroes, by, 191-192, 193-197

Mifflin, Warner, the memorial of, 38

Migration of Negro Methodists and Baptists, 122

Miles, W. H., one of the first bishops of the C. M. E. Church, 196

Miller, George Frazier, an Episcopal rector of Brooklyn, 277, 304

Miller, Kelly, opinion of, referred to, 280-281

Miller, Thomas, pioneer in the A. M. E. Zion Church, 78

Miller, William, a pioneer preacher among the Methodists, 78; elected bishop of the A. M. E. Zion Church, 105; death of, 105

Missionaries, the attitude of the early, among Negroes, 1-2; in the West Indies, 26-27

Missionary work, the lack of, in America, 21; impeded in Africa, 309-311

Mississippi, the Presbyterians of, interested in the Negro, 155

Mixed churches, procedure in, 132-133

Mobile, a Negro church in, 118; establishment of the Anthony Street Church in, 135

Monks, Capucin, protest of, 3

Montague, Justice James, favorable to Andrew Bryan, 49-50

Montgomery, Alabama, Negro Baptists in, 118

Moore, Matthew, the pastor of whites and Negroes, 44

Moore, Bishop, election of, 105; retirement of, 105

Morehouse College, the establishment of, 203

Morris Brown University, the establishment of, 205

Morris, E. C., head of the National Baptist Convention, 261

Morris, Rev. Mr., a preacher in Virginia, 135

Moses, Rev. Mr., a worker among Negroes in Virginia, 53

Mound Bayou, mixed Baptist Church in, 86

Muir, a worker in Kentucky, 38

National Association for the Relief of Destitute Colored Women and Children, the efforts of, 307

National Baptist Convention, 201; the fight of, against white Baptists, 257-264

National Freedmen's Relief Association, the work of, 207

Neal, Rev. Mr., the labors of, in Dover, 12

Neau, Elias, the work of, among Negroes in New York, 12-14

Negro Baptists, connection of, with white Baptists, 201

Negro Church, the, socialized, 266-285; a place for recreation, 267-268; educational institution, 268-273; a welfare agency, 273-277; leadership in, 280-281; the criticism of, 302-303; its present situation, 300-313

Negro ministers, restrictions upon, 131; the authority of, 278-279; unique position of, 281-282; still numerous, 304-305; in conflict with southern white ministers, 305-306; a redeeming force, 301

Negro schools established after the Civil War, 203-219

Negroes, the religious point of view of, 146-147

New England Missionary Convention, the, 200

New England, missionary work of, among Negroes, 15-17; Negro churches in, 121

New Haven, Connecticut, Negro Congregational Church in, 99

New Jersey, the conversion of Negroes in, 12

New York, the instruction of Negroes in, 12-15

New York City, the Abyssinian Baptist Church in, organized, 88-89

Newman, Rev. Mr., preaching of, to Negroes in North Carolina, 9-10

Norman, M. W. D., a preacher of power, 282

North, Negro Baptists in, 120, 122

North Carolina, the instruction of Negroes in, 9-10; the work of the Quakers in, 18; Negro Baptists of, organized the first State Convention, 199-200

Northern philanthropy, change in, 263-264

Northwestern Baptist Convention, 200

Northwestern Freedmen's Aid Commission, the work of, 207

Ohio, Negro Baptists in, 122

Olivet Baptist Church, the success of, 278-279

Olmsted, F. L., comment of, on religious instruction, 149-151; interest of, in the freedmen, 212

O'Neal, J. B., ideas of, as to Negro uplift, 164

Opinions, differences of, a difficulty, 19-20

Osborne, Justice Henry, favorable to Andrew Bryan, 49

Paine, Bishop Robert, interest of, in Colored Methodists, 195-196

Paine College, the establishment of, 205

Palmer, founder of the Church at Silver Bluff, 41-42

Pamphlet, Gowan, a preacher of the Negro race in Virginia, 53

Panama, de Luna Victoria, a bishop in, 4

Parsippany, Presbyterian School at, 152

Patterson, Robert, an elder in Kentucky, 38

Paul, Thomas, a pioneer Negro Baptist preacher in New England, 88-91; work of, in Boston, 88; efforts of, in New York, 89-90; missionary efforts of, 90-91

Payne, Bishop Daniel A., early work of, 171-172

Payne, C. H., religious work of, 230; in politics, 230-231

Penn, William, interest of, in Negroes, 18

Pennington, J. W. C., the achievements of, 178-179

Pennsylvania Freedmen's Relief Association, the efforts of, 207

Pennsylvania, the missionary movement in, 11-12

Perkins, R. J., a pioneer preacher of West Virginia, 240

Perry, Rufus L., religious and educational work of, 242-244

Peru, a Negro bishop in, 4

Peter, Jesse, the work of, in reviving the Silver Bluff Church, 42

Petersburgh, Virginia, Baptist Church in, 53, 85

Philadelphia, the Negro Baptist Church of, established, 86; proslavery element in, 86-87

Philanthropy, northern, change in, 263-264

Phillips, C. H., a bishop of the C. M. E. Church, 240

Phillips, Doc., a pioneer Negro preacher, 137

Pierce, Edward L., interest of, in the freedmen, 212

Pioneer Negro preachers, 40-70

Poindexter, James, a pioneer Negro Baptist preacher in Ohio, 122; religious efforts of, 223; in politics, 223-224

Politics, the call of, 220-246

Polk, Bishop, attitude of, toward the instruction of his slaves, 149-151

Pontier, Samuel, a pioneer in the A. M. E. Zion Church, 78

Porteus, Bishop, interest of, in the salvation of Negroes, 7

Portsmouth, Virginia, Negro Baptist church in, 54-55, 111

Powell, A. C, a preacher with a following, 282

Preachers, Negro, pioneer work of, 40-70; educational work of, 168-169; as spokesmen of the Negroes, 169; interested in colonization, 170; in the underground railroad, 170, 171; in the press, 171

Preachers, Negro Pioneer, 40-70

Preachers of versatile genius, 167-184

Presbyterians, interest of, in Negroes, 97-98; failure to win Negroes, 98; position on slavery and the Negro, 36-39; position of in 1782, 36-37; pacifist letter of, 38-39; the attitude of, on slavery, 124-127, 128, 130; interest of, in the instruction of Negroes, 152-158; schools of, 203, 204, 205; educational work of, 210; attract Negroes, 256

Price, J. C., the record of, 206; the education of, 217

Primitive Baptist Church, Negroes separate therefrom, 192

Princeton, John Chavis at, 68

Proctor, H. H., church institutional work of, 276

Progressive Baptists, the separation of, from whites, 259-264

Progressive ideas in the Negro church, 247-265

Protestant Episcopal Freedmen's Commission, aid of, to Negroes, 211

Protracted meetings among Baptists, 143-144

Providence Baptist Association, organization of, 122

Pugh, the work of, among Negroes, 12

Quakers, the efforts of, among Negroes, 17-19

Quinn, W. P., a successful missionary, 101; elected bishop, 101

Race prejudice in the church, 305-309

Ranford, of Chowan, a preacher to Negroes, 9

Ransom, R. C., head of the Institutional Church, Chicago, 276; an editor, 297

Ray, Charles B., the work of, 173-174

Recent growth of the Negro church, 286-299

Recent statistics of the Negro church, 286-299

Reddick, M. W., a preacher of influence, 282

Relation of the individual to the church, differing ideas as to, 251-252

Relations of whites and blacks in churches, 132-134

Religion, differing ideas of, 250-251

Religious education as a preparation, 202-219

Religious instruction revived, 148-166

Revells, Hiram R., sketch of, 183-184

Rice, an elder in Kentucky, interested in the Negro, 38

Richard, a slave preacher, the escape of, 72

Riddle, J. M., a minister in California, 278

Riot of Negroes in New York in 1812, 14

Rippon, Dr., testimony of, as to Andrew Bryan, 51

Roberts, Isaac, a preacher in Savannah, 117

Roberts, John W., a Negro made bishop to Africa by the Methodists, 189

Roberts, R., the missionary work of, 100

Rockefeller, John D., interested in the preaching of Charles T. Walker, 245

Roger Williams University, the establishment of, 203

Rogers, E. P., a preacher before the Civil War, 179; poem of, on the Missouri Compromise, 179

Rose, David, friend of Lemuel Haynes, 62

Ross, the work of, in Pennsylvania, 11

Rush, Christopher, a pioneer in A. M. E. Zion Church, 85; election of, as bishop, 102; the success of, 102-103

Ryland, Robert, pastor of Negro church in Richmond, 111-112; work of, among Negroes, in Richmond, 135; promoter of religious instruction among Negroes, 161-163; comment on, 162-163

Samuels, an early C. M. E. worker, 196

Sandiford, Ralph, interest of, in Negroes, 18

Sandoval, Alfonso, protest of, in behalf of Negroes, 3

Savannah, resolutions of the Baptist Association of, on Andrew Bryan, 53; the Baptist Church in, 85; the churches of, 115-117

Sayre, J., the work of, among Negroes in New York, 15

Schism among white Methodists, effect of, on Negro Methodists, 83-84-85; in the Methodist Church, 123-124, 127-128, 130; in all churches, 123-147; in the Negro Baptist Church, 297-298

Schismatic movement in Negro church, 247-265; results from, 257-258

Scott, Daniel, a preacher in Philadelphia, 121

Scott, June, a pioneer Methodist preacher, 78; schismatic efforts of, 79-80

Secker, Bishop, sermon on conversion of Negroes, 7

Sewell, Jonathan, interest of, in slaves, 16

Shaw, Francis F., interest of, in the freedmen, 212

Shaw University, the establishment of, 203

Simmons, William J., religious efforts of, 223; in politics, 223

Simpson, Hagar, a member of the Baptist Church in Savannah, 45

Simpson, Smart, a co-worker of Morris Brown, 76

Slaves indoctrinated, 3

Smith, Bishop C. S., educational efforts of, 297

Smith, George, an Emancipating Baptist, 35

Socializing the Negro church, 266-285

Society for the Propagation of the Gospel in Foreign Parts, organized, 6; the work of, 6-22

South Carolina, Negroes in, instructed, 7; a Negro school in, 8; Negro Baptists in, 112; Methodists in, interested in Negro uplift, 158-159

Southern Baptist Convention, 200

Sovereigns of Europe, change of attitude of, toward Negro, 2

Spain, decrees of, as to indoctrinating slaves, 3

Spanish sovereigns, missionary spirit of, 1

Spencer, Peter, a pioneer Negro preacher, 76

Spywood, election of, as bishop, 104-105

St. George Methodist Episcopal Church, in Philadelphia, trouble in, 73

St. James, an Episcopal Church established in Baltimore, 96

St. Louis, Negro Baptists in, 120

St. Phillips Church, episcopal, established in New York, 94-95

St. Thomas, an episcopal church established in Philadelphia, 94

Statistics on Negro membership in mixed churches, 146; of Freedmen Aid Societies, 206-208; of the Negro church, 286-299

Stevens, David, a preacher of power, 104

Stewart, John, a pioneer Negro preacher in Ohio, 58-61

Stewart, Rev. Mr., a missionary in North Carolina, 10

Stiles, Ezra, interest in the Negro, 36

Storer, Bellamy, interest of, in the freedmen, 212

Stokes, W. H., a forceful preacher in Richmond, 241

Stoupe, the work of, in New York, 15

Straight College, the establishment of, 204

Stratton, Daniel, a pioneer preacher of West Virginia, 240

Struggle between the conservative and the progressive in the Negro church, 247-265

Sturgeon, W., the work of, among Negroes, 11-12

Taft, William H., interested in the preaching of Charles T. Walker, 245

Talented Negroes in conflict with the conservatives, 247-265

Talladega College, the establishment of, 203-204

Tanner, Bishop B. T., comment of, 92-93; a power in the A. M. E. Church, 239

Tanner, C. M., an African Methodist preacher in Washington, 240

Tapsico, Jacob, a co-worker of Richard Allen, 75

Tarrant, Carter, an Emancipating Baptist, 35

Taylor, Charles, the work of, in New York, 15

Taylor, Rev. E., interest of, in the enlightenment of Negroes, 7-8

Teague, Collin, a co-worker of Lott Cary, 139-140

Tennessee, Baptists in, 119; George Bentley's work in, 137

Terrell, L., pastor of Negro Baptist Church in Lexington, 119

Thiergood, R. T., an early C. M. E. worker, 196

Thomas, Samuel, a teacher of Negroes, 7

Thompson, Abraham, a pioneer in the A. M. E. Zion Church, 78-79; schismatic efforts of, 79-80, 81

Tindley, C. A., a preacher of power, 244

Toronto, Negro Baptists in, 122; Methodists in, 122

Tougaloo University, the establishment of, 204

Transylvania, the Presbytery of, concerned with the Negroes, 38

Trujillo, a Negro bishop in, 4

Turner, Bishop H. M., religious work of, 232; in politics, 232-234

Turner, Nat, the effect of the insurrection of, 52, 69

Turpin, London, a co-worker of Morris Brown, 76

Uncle Jack, a Negro pioneer preacher, 55-56

Union American Methodist Episcopal Church organized, 107

Union Church of Africans, organized, 107

Union Seminary, the forerunner of Wilberforce, 205

Unwritten law as to holding Christians slaves, 4

Usher, J., the work of, among Negroes, 16

Vanderhorst, R. H., a pioneer preacher in the C. M. E. Church, 196; elected bishop, 196

Varick, James, a pioneer in the A. M. E. Zion Church, 78; elected bishop, 85; death of, 102

Vaughn, Richard, a preacher in Philadelphia, 121

Vermont Avenue Baptist Church, 282

Vesey, a supporter of Negro missions, 13

Vesey, Denmark, the effect of the insurrection of, 78

Vices, so-called, 253

Victoria, Francisco Xavier de Luna, a churchman of Negro blood, 4

Virginia, Quakers in, 17-18; Emancipating Baptists in, 32-34; Negro Baptists in, 53-54: reactionary laws of, 131

Virginia Theological Seminary and College, the establishment of, 206

Waldron, J. M., church institutional work of, 276; in politics, 312

Walker, C. T., a preacher of power, 245-246

Walker, William, opposition of, to work of John Stewart, 60

Walters, Bishop A., church work of, 311-312; in politics, 312

Ward, Samuel R., record of, 182-183; Frederick Douglass' opinion of, 183

Watcoat, Richard, recognition of Richard Allen by, 73

Waters, Edward, ordained assistant bishop, 101

Webster, Thomas, a co-worker of Richard Allen, 75

Wells, Richard, a useful minister in Richmond, 240

West Indies, missionaries to Negroes in, 4

Western Colored Baptist Convention, organization of, 122

Western Freedmen's Aid Commission, the work of, 207

Western University, the establishment of, 205

Wesley, John, the position of, 26

White, J. T., in politics, 225; religious efforts of, 225

White, Sampson, a pioneer preacher in the Baptist Church, 110-111; preaching of, in New York, 121; pastor of the Gillfield Baptist Church, 136

White, W. J., a successful minister, 240

White, William, a co-worker of Richard Allen, 74-75

White man's standard, an influence, 252-253

Whitefield, George, the position of, on the Negro, 26

Whitmore, the work of, in New York, 14

Whittier, John G., interest of, in the freedmen, 212

Wilberforce University, the establishment of, 205

Williams, John A., a pioneer preacher in the A. M. E. Zion Church, 104; a noted revivalist, 104

Williams, L. K., popular pastor in Chicago, 278; social work of, 278-279

Williams, Peter, a pioneer in the A. M. E. Zion Church, 78; rector of St. Phillips in New York, 94-95; his lack of force, 95

Williams, Richard, a supporter of Richard Allen, 75

Williams, R. S., a bishop of the C. M. E. Church, 240

Williamsburg, Virginia, the Baptist Church in, 1785, 53

Williamson, Edward, a supporter of Richard Allen, 76

Willis, J. E., a preacher of power, 282

Willis, Joseph, a pioneer preacher in the South, 86

Wood River Baptist Association, organization of, 122

Woods, R. C., progress of the Virginia Theological Seminary under, 264

Woolman, John, efforts of, for enlightenment of Negroes, 18

Worlds, J. J., a pioneer preacher of North Carolina, 240

Worship, mode of, questioned, 254-255

Wortham, Dr. James F., a student under John Chavis, 70

Wright, R. R., editor and publisher, 297

Yates, a worker in Pennsylvania, 11

Young Negroes in conflict with the old in the church, 247-249

[Transcriber's note: Original spelling variations have not been standardized. Underscores have been used to indicate _italic_ fonts. Footnotes have been collected at the end of the text, followed by the Index. "THE FIRST COLORED BAPTIST CHURCH IN NORTH AMERICA" [in the caption of the image] is listed as "The Oldest Negro Baptist Church in the United States" in the list of illustrations.]