Pentecostal denominations move toward racial reconciliation
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| NEW YORK
Forty-five years ago, at the National Cathedral in Washington, D.C., Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. preached a sermon in which he observed, 鈥淓leven o'clock on Sunday morning is the most segregated hour of America.鈥
It was a fact that always bothered the Rev. Thomas Barclay, senior pastor of Progressive Beulah Pentecostal Church in Chicago鈥檚 south side, who was 12 years old at the time.
鈥淚鈥檝e been in the Pentecostal church all my life, but I always noticed the separation between white and black,鈥 says Mr. Barclay, who also heads the United Pentecostal Council of the Assemblies of God, a small but worldwide consortium of black churches. 鈥淪o as a little boy growing up, I asked the question why, but nobody would answer the questions. So as I got older, I鈥檓 still asking the same questions.鈥
Barclay鈥檚 questions, of course, laid bare a painful century of racism throughout American Protestantism, and not too much has changed since Dr. King uttered his now oft-quoted words.
But over the past few months, a simmering movement of reconciliation has begun to emerge among the historically segregated sects of modern American Pentecostalism 鈥 the free-wheeling, grass-roots branch of Evangelical Protestantism known for exuberant forms of worship and ecstatic speaking in tongues.
Last week, Barclay鈥檚 denomination signed a historic agreement of cooperation with the much larger Assemblies of God USA, a historically white denomination of American Pentecostals with just under 13,000 congregations nationwide and about 3 million adherents. The groups agreed to share resources and include each other鈥檚 members in national events, especially among their youths.
Last fall, too, leaders from the Assemblies of God met, for the first time ever, with leaders from the Church of God in Christ, a predominantly African-American denomination and the largest Pentecostal consortium of congregations in the country with more than 6 million members. The groups agreed to maintain a long-neglected dialogue.
Yet coming during a time of stark political divisions in the US 鈥 divisions that still can carry deep racial overtones 鈥 the reconciliation of these Pentecostal groups carries a certain measure of historical poignancy, and even a kind of theological irony.聽Indeed, the early days of Pentecostalism were a rare time when blacks and whites and men and women worshipped freely together, and leaders could come from any of these. And some of today's segregated denominations are beginning to rediscover their roots as long-lost cousins.
Most American Pentecostals trace their lineage to a 1906 movement known as the Azusa Street Revival in Los Angeles. It began when a one-eyed black preacher from Texas, William Seymour, a son of former slaves, began to preach and speak in tongues on the front porch of what the Los Angeles Times called 鈥渁 tumble-down shack on Azusa Street.鈥
Eventually, hordes of ecstatic crowds of black, Hispanic, and white neighbors filled the streets for days, worshipping in a frenzy of shouts and spiritual tongues 鈥 moments Pentecostals call 鈥渢he baptism of the Holy Spirit.鈥
As word of the street revival grew, more and more people began to come to worship. In their fervor, very few took account of their fellow worshippers鈥 race or even gender 鈥 a radical occurrence for the time, and one that outside observers often looked on with disgust.
鈥淥nce you get the Holy Spirit involved, all bets are off,鈥 says Randall Balmer, chairman of the department of religion at Dartmouth College in Hanover, N.H. 鈥淎nd that鈥檚 the beauty of Pentecostalism, that people were responding to the promptings of the Spirit 鈥 and I鈥檓 willing to acknowledge that this is what it was. And the Spirit does not make judgments according to gender, or to race, and that鈥檚 the beauty of these movements.鈥
From an anthropological perspective, movements like these often include 鈥渓iminal鈥 moments, those times of personal and social disorientation that occur during various types of rituals and worship. Participants of such rituals sometimes undergo a process of social conversion, a restructuring of their personal identity and sense of community.
During the nascent years of Pentecostalism, participants鈥 emphasis on the baptism of the Holy Spirit allowed for a surprising and inclusive range of leaders, including blacks and women. 聽
鈥淲hen I teach the Azusa revival in class, I always try to emphasize what a huge, huge tragedy this was, that Pentecostalism lost its interracial character as it began to succumb to sociological inevitability 鈥 that is, as this enthusiastic movement began to routinize and move into its institutional forms,鈥 says Professor Balmer.
In 1914, leaders established the General Council of the Assemblies of God in Hot Springs, Ark., but it quickly began to deny voting privileges to women, and eventually refused to ordain black ministers, officially referring them to the Church of God in Christ.
Barclay鈥檚 denomination, the United Pentecostal Council, formed in 1914 after the Assemblies of God refused to sanction a black missionary to Liberia.
But about four years ago, Barclay reached out to George Wood, the general superintendent for Assemblies of God in the US.
鈥淚 knew nothing about this group, I knew nothing about its history,鈥 says Dr. Wood. 鈥淪o it was a very welcome call from [Barclay] 鈥 and it caused me a lot of embarrassment that that ever happened in our history.鈥
Challenges remain as the groups seek to reconcile from this history 鈥 and perhaps even to reunite again. The mostly white Assemblies of God remain politically conservative 鈥 89 percent of pastors identify as Republican in one survey, and many members are active in religious politics on the right 鈥 while the black churches overwhelmingly identify as Democratic.
But 40 percent of the Assemblies of God are now from minority groups, Wood says, including about 300 mostly black congregations.
鈥淚鈥檝e been around the block a few times, and I鈥檝e never seen a day when there鈥檚 been closer participation, friendship, fellowship,鈥 says Wood. 鈥淭here's recognition that we鈥檝e got to be kingdom minded, and not focus on our own tribe, so to speak. And so I think there鈥檚 just a greater awareness that we鈥檙e all part of something that鈥檚 bigger than any one of our individual groups, and we want to be in good relationships with one another, not competitive with one another, but complementary.鈥