Disputed section from Trinity United Church of Christ Article edit

Trinity in comparative perspective edit

Byassee argues that "African Americans have generated distinctly black forms of Christianity since they arrived on these [American] shores" and asserts that "the significance of these forms has been appreciated in mainline seminaries and churches for at least two generations."[1] Speller has discussed the major interpretive frameworks into which black churches have been historically categorized by scholars, as well as several later ones. She does this to place Trinity within a broader understanding of the black church, and all Christian churches, and to trace Trinity's history of movement within several of the frameworks, while also discussing numerous of Trinity's ongoing struggles.[2] Byassee asserts that Trinity is well within the mainstream of the black church, and is remarkable in the mainline world only for its size and influence."[1]

Speller opines that three interpretive models of black churches have predominated in scholarly literature from especially prior the 1960s: "The Assimilation Model", "The Isolation Model", and "The Compensatory Model".

The Assimilation Model edit

Black churches that have been explained as within the The Assimilation Model are those primarily composed of middle-class blacks motivated by a racially integrated society and who are willing to disassociate themselves from their ethnic identity to achieve this, as well as to avoid the stereotyped labels sometimes assigned to blacks by whites. This model has been described as the "demise of the black church for the public good of blacks."[3]

The Isolation Model edit

The Isolation Model category has been assigned to those black churches composed of primarily lower-class blacks who lack the optimism of middle-class blacks about societal integration between the races. Churches described as within this model hold to theologies that emphasize "other worldliness" and deemphasize social action within "this world."[3]

The Compensatory Model edit

The Compensatory Model has been a designation of black churches where congregants find acceptance, appreciation, and applause often denied them within dominant society. Motivation stems from a promise of achieving personal empowerment and recognition, i.e., congregants are "compensated" with improved self-esteem as their peers affirm their successes.[3]

The Ethnic Community-prophetic Model edit

Speller, following the research of Nelson and Nelson in the 1970s, notes how each of the above three models placed black churches within a reactive rather than a proactive mode. Finding that problematic, and unsatisfied that previous interpretive models accurately depicted black churches that emerged in the 1960s, Nelson and Nelson developed a fourth model, The Ethnic Community-prophetic Model. Black churches that have been categorized as such are those that have been marked by blacks who spoke out and undertook activism against economic and political injustices from a heightened awareness of black pride and power.[3]

The Dialectical Model edit

In her discussion about Trinity, Speller argues for an additional model of the black church, The Dialectical Model, developed by the late Duke University sociologist C. Eric Lincoln to explain certain black churches. Corrective to the earlier models by which black churches were susceptible to being rigidly stereotyped, and that barred them from being seen as societal change agents, Lincoln and Mamiya describe the model as holding in "dialectical tension" "the priestly and the prophetic; other-worldly versus this-worldly; universalism and particularism; communalism and privatism; the charismatic versus the bureaucratic and resistance versus accommodation."[4] Speller additionally argues that The Dialectical Model is mirrored in W. E. B. Du Bois's concept of "double consciousness".[5] Du Bois explained this dichotomy:

The history of the American Negro is the history of this strife—this longing to attain self-conscious manhood, to merge his double self into a better and truer self. In this merging he wishes neither of the older selves to be lost. He does not wish to Africanize America, for America has too much to teach the world and Africa; he does not wish to bleach his Negro blood in a flood of white Americanism, for he believes that Negro blood has yet a message for the world. He simply wishes to make it possible for a man to be both a Negro and an American without being cursed and spit upon by his fellows, without losing the opportunity of self-development.[6]

The evolution of Trinity edit

Speller asserts that Trinity in its history has evolved from the Assimilation Model under pastors Kenneth B. Smith and Willie J. Jamerson, to the Compensatory Model under Reuben A. Sheares II and during the early years of Jeremiah Wright's tenure, and into the Ethnic Community-prophetic Model under Wright to embrace the Dialectical Model also under Wright. She states, however, that the church continues to struggle in varying degrees to balance the dialectic polarities described by Lincoln and Mamiya (see The Dialectical Model, just above), and that the church's greatest challenge has been "mediating the tension between being black and Christian."[7] Any tensions are quite beside the point, though, for American political conservatives writing for partisan opinion journals, such as Stanley Kurtz in National Review, who chide Trinity for daring to have made the first step from the Assimilation Model.[8]

  1. ^ a b Jason Byassee (2007). "A visit to Chicago's Trinity UCC Aricentric church". The Christian Century (May 29): 18-23.
  2. ^ Speller, Julia Michelle. "Unashamedly Black and unapologetically Christian: One congregation's quest for meaning and belonging". Ph.D. dissertation. Illinois: The University of Chicago: 5–19. {{cite journal}}: |access-date= requires |url= (help); Unknown parameter |laysource= ignored (help)
  3. ^ a b c d Nelson, Hart M. (1975). Black Church in the 1960s. Lexington: University Press of Kentucky. p. 74. B000H1VXOY. Cited in Speller, Julia Michelle (1996). "Unashamedly Black and unapologetically Christian: One congregation's quest for meaning and belonging." Ph.D. dissertation, The University of Chicago, United States—Illinois, 8-9. Retrieved April 4 2008, from ProQuest Digital Dissertations database. {{cite book}}: Unknown parameter |coauthors= ignored (|author= suggested) (help)
  4. ^ Lincoln, C. Eric and Lawrence H. Mamiya (1990) The Black Church in the African American Experience, Duke University Press, Durham, p. 12-15. Cited in Speller, Julia Michelle (1996). "Unashamedly Black and unapologetically Christian: One congregation's quest for meaning and belonging." Ph.D. dissertation, The University of Chicago, United States—Illinois. Retrieved April 4 2008, from ProQuest Digital Dissertations database. P. 11-12.
  5. ^ Lincoln, C. Eric and Lawrence H. Mamiya (1990) The Black Church in the African American Experience, Duke University Press, Durham, p. 11. Cited in Speller, Julia Michelle (1996). "Unashamedly Black and unapologetically Christian: One congregation's quest for meaning and belonging." Ph.D. dissertation, The University of Chicago, United States—Illinois. Retrieved April 4 2008, from ProQuest Digital Dissertations database. P. 8-9.
  6. ^ Du Bois. W. E. B. "Strivings of the Negro People." Atlantic Monthly, 80 (1897), p. 194-198. Available online.
  7. ^ Speller, Julia Michelle. "Unashamedly Black and unapologetically Christian: One congregation's quest for meaning and belonging". Ph.D. dissertation. Illinois: The University of Chicago: 13–14. {{cite journal}}: |access-date= requires |url= (help); Unknown parameter |laysource= ignored (help)
  8. ^ Stanley Kurtz, "The God of Black Power", National Review, 19 May 2008.