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Black Catholic Movement

The Black Catholic Movement (or Black Catholic Revolution) was a movement of African-American Catholics in the United States that developed and shaped modern Black Catholicism.

Black Catholic Movement
Date1968–1995[a]
Location
United States
Caused byAssassination of Martin Luther King Jr., Racism, segregation, Jim Crow laws, socioeconomic inequality, Second Vatican Council
Resulted in
  • Introduction of African American music and spirituality to Catholic liturgy and praxis
  • Redevelopment of many inner-city Catholic schools as independent schools run by Black nuns and religious sisters
  • Founding of new Black Catholic organizations
  • Appointment of first African-American bishops
    • First African-American archbishops
  • Increase in number of Black seminarians, brothers, priests, nuns, and religious sisters
  • Exploration of possibility for an African-American Catholic rite

From roughly 1968 to the mid-1990s, Black Catholicism would transform from pre-Vatican II roots into a full member of the Black Church. It developed its own structure, identity, music, liturgy, thought, theology, and appearance within the larger Catholic Church. As a result, in the 21st century, Black Catholic Church traditions are seen in most Black parishes, institutions, schools, and organizations across the country.

Background edit

Vatican II edit

In 1962, Pope John XXIII convened the most recent Catholic ecumenical council, Vatican II. It eliminated Latin as the required liturgical language of the Western portion of the Church.[1]

This change opened the door for inculturation in both new and historic areas of practice. As early as the 1950s, under the creative eye of Black Catholics such as Fr Clarence Rivers, the fusion of Protestant-originated Black Gospel music with Catholic liturgy had been experimented with on a basic level.[2] Rivers's music (and musical direction) was used at the first official English-language Mass in the United States in 1964, including his watershed work, "God Is Love".[3]

Membership boom edit

Alongside this nascent inculturation came a second boom in Black Catholic numbers, as they increased by 220,000 (35%) during the 1960s, and more than half were converts.[4] In 1966, Fr Harold R. Perry became the first known Black bishop to serve in the US when he was named auxiliary bishop of New Orleans.[5]

Following the assassination of Martin Luther King and associated riots (including Mayor Daley's shoot-to-kill order in Chicago), Black Catholics inaugurated a number of powerful new organizations in early 1968. These included the National Black Catholic Clergy Caucus (NBCC), organized by Fr Herman Porter, and its sister organization, the National Black Sisters' Conference (NBSC), organized by Sr Martin de Porres Grey.[6]

The larger movement (or "revolution") broke out thereafter as Black Catholics increasingly latched onto Black Power and Black Consciousness as appropriate means of expressing their right to be "authentically Black" in their expression of the Catholic faith.[6]

History edit

NBCC statement (1968) edit

At the inaugural NBCCC meeting in Detroit, caucus members declared in the opening line of their statement that "the Catholic Church in the United States is primarily a White, racist institution."[6]

The statement made waves throughout the Church. It provided perspective on the riots that were so intensely discomforting White American (and White Catholic) sensibilities, and was part of the demands for change in the Catholic Church—including an active commitment to Black self-oversight, freedom, and vocations. More specifically, they demanded a Black vicariate, an episcopal vicar, a Black-led office for Black Catholics, Black diaconate, Black liturgical inculturation, inclusion of Black history and culture in seminary education, and diocesan programs for training those who intended to shepherd Black Catholics. Without such changes, the caucus claimed, the Catholic Church would soon become irrelevant to the Black community.[7]

At least two of these requests were answered rather quickly. With the support of a White Josephite superior general, who advocated for it as early as 1967, the permanent diaconate was restored in the United States in October 1968, and the National Office for Black Catholics (NOBC) was established in 1970.[7]

Growth (1969-1971) edit

The movement/revolution centered in Chicago, where numerous Black Catholics resided in the late 1960s, forming sizable Black parishes. But these were always under the leadership of White priests. Fr George Clements, one of the more radical(ized) members of the inaugural NBCCC meeting, entered into an extended row with Archbishop John Cody over this lack of Black pastors in Chicago and Black Catholic inculturation.[8]

Unconventional alliances with local Black Protestant leaders and Black radical activists resulted in innovative (and defiant) liturgical celebrations known as the Black Unity Mass, trans-parochial events where Black priests donned Afrocentric vestments, decorated the altar similarly, and celebrated the Mass with a decidedly "Black" liturgical flair. One such Mass in 1969 included New York activist-priest Lawrence Lucas, an 80-voice gospel choir provided by the Rev. Jesse Jackson, and security provided by the Black Panthers.[8]

One of the first parishes to engage in Black liturgical inculturation and establish a gospel choir was St. Francis de Sales Catholic Church in New Orleans, in 1969. (It is now known as St. Katharine Drexel Church).[9] One of the first musicians to experiment similarly was Grayson Warren Brown, a Presbyterian convert who set the entire Mass to gospel-style music. Fr William Norvel, a Josephite, helped introduce gospel choirs to Black Catholic parishes nationwide (especially in Washington, D.C. and Los Angeles). This "Gospel Mass" trend quickly spread across the nation.[10]

Even as these new changes swept through the emerging "Black Catholic Church", so too did the backlash and general unease with which many Black Catholics held their faith. As they embraced a more robust Black nationalism, it often clashed with all they knew Catholicism to represent.[11] This sentiment was not limited to laypeople nor did was it contradicted by White reactions to the movement/revolution, as many dioceses, religious orders, parishes, and lay groups reacted negatively to both the Civil Rights and Black Power movements on the whole.[citation needed]

In 1970, the National Black Catholic Lay Caucus (NBCLC, or NBLCC) was founded. It partnered with the NBCCC, NBSC, NBCSA, and NOBC in combating the marginalization of Blacks. At their first meeting in August of that year, they drafted a resolution echoing the demands of the inaugural NBCCC meeting two years prior. In addition, they added new demands, such as four Black bishops, greater lay and youth decision-making power, and "hierarchical support in developing an African-American liturgy".[12]

In summer 1971, the NBCLC staged a sit-in at the Josephites' headquarters, demanding similar changes.[13]

Education reform, Black offices and exodus (1971-1975) edit

After the NOBC was allotted only 30% of their requested funding for 1970 by the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops (USCCB) and after Cardinal O'Boyle (a staunch supporter of Civil Rights) announced his retirement, a delegation of Black Catholics led by the NBCLC president brought their grievances to the Vatican in 1971. They informed Deputy Secretary of State Abp Giovanni Benelli that the American bishops had been "lying" to Rome about the state of Black Catholicism (which was bleeding members and "dying"). They demanded that a Black man be appointed as the next Archbishop of Washington D.C., an African-American rite be created, and an African-American cardinal be named.[14][15]

That same year, the NBSC, NOBC, and various Black Catholic laypeople spearheaded a national campaign to stop the mass closings of Catholic schools in urban and predominantly Black communities. In many cases, neglected and/or to-be-shuttered Black Catholic schools were adapted as community-led institutions. Much like the period some 125 years prior, Black nuns led a movement to educate Black children in a time when the American and Catholic White hierarchy did not seem to care to.[16]

During this same period, Black Catholic ministries began to pop up in dioceses around the country, often in response to hostile conditions and with pushback from many Black Catholics themselves.[17]

The unrest extended into seminaries as well. At the Josephites', tensions between the more race-conscious Black students/members and their White peers, as well as with teachers/elders (Black and White) boiled over into open hostility. Many students left the seminary and a number of Josephite priests resigned. By 1971, the seminary had closed for studies. To this day, Josephite seminarians study at nearby universities, and their vocations from Black Americans has never recovered.[18][19]

A wave of resignations by priests occurred across Black Catholicism in the 1970s and coincided with a general nadir of American Catholicism overall (the latter being more or less unrelated to race issues). Catholics of all races began lapsing in droves. Between 1970 and 1975, hundreds of Black Catholic seminarians, dozens (~13%) of Black Catholic priests, and 125 Black nuns (~14%) left their posts, including NBCS foundress Sr. Martin de Porres Grey in 1974. Up to 20% of Black Catholics stopped practicing.[20][21]

New organizations, major thinkers and USCCB letter (late 1970s) edit

Even with the decline in vocations and lay practice during the 1970s, various new national Black Catholic organizations emerged by the end of the decade.

During the early to mid-70s, the various (and largely informal) Black Catholic diocesan offices/ministries began to gain official recognition and approval. In 1976 their leaders formed a consortium known as the National Association of Black Catholic Administrators.[6] The next year, the NOBC became a member, and eventually the NABCA subsumed the NOBC altogether.[17]

The Black Catholic Theological Symposium (BCTS), a yearly gathering dedicated to the promotion of Black Catholic theology, emerged in 1978 in Baltimore. From it has come some of the leading voices not only in Black Catholic theology, but in Womanist and Black theology as well: a founder of one of the watershed organizations of the latter movement (the National Council of Black Churchmen, or NCBC) was the aforementioned Fr Lucas. Writers such as Dr Diana L. Hayes, Dr M. Shawn Copeland, Sr Jamie T. Phelps, Fr Cyprian Davis, and Servant of God Thea Bowman have had an immeasurable influence in advancing the cause of Black Catholic history, theology, theory, and liturgy.[22][23]

The next year in 1979, the Institute for Black Catholic Studies was founded at Xavier University of Louisiana. Every summer since, it has hosted a variety of accredited courses on Black Catholic theology, ministry, ethics, and history, offering a Continuing Education and Enrichment program, as well as a Master of Theology degree. It is "the only graduate theology program in the western hemisphere taught from a Black Catholic perspective".[24][25]

That same year, the USCCB issued a pastoral letter dissecting and condemning racism, entitled "Brothers and Sisters to Us", for the first time addressing the issue in a group publication.[26]

George Stallings and Black bishops (1980s-1987) edit

Fr George Stallings, a Black Catholic priest known for his fiery activism and no-holds-barred demands of the Church, pressed for a Black Catholic rite (complete with bishops and the associated episcopal structure) during the 70s and 80s; this bold request was intended to give Black Catholics the kind of independence many were calling for at the time.[27]

In 1974 Eugene A. Marino was named auxiliary bishop of Washington, and Joseph L. Howze became the first recognized Black Catholic bishop of a diocese when he was named Bishop of Biloxi in 1977.[28] Marino would become the first-ever Black Catholic archbishop in 1988, following an open demand made to the USCCB in 1985.[29] Marino resigned from his archbishopric two years after his appointment, following a sex scandal related to his secret marriage (and impregnation) of a Church employee.[30]

Between 1966 and 1988, the Holy See would name 13 Black bishops. In 1984 they would issue their own pastoral letter entitled "What We Have Seen and Heard", explaining the nature, value, and strength of Black Catholicism.[31][32] The next year, the United States Catholic Conference (a predecessor organization to the USCCB), with the help of Servant of God Sr. Dr. Thea Bowman, issued a document titled "Families: Black and Catholic, Catholic and Black", encouraging Black Catholics to maintain Black cultural traditions.[33]

In 1987, the National Black Catholic Congress (NBCC) emerged as a purported successor to Daniel Rudd's Colored Catholic Congress movement of the late 19th century. It was founded as a nonprofit in conjunction with the NABCA and under the name of Fr John Ricard, future bishop of Pensacola-Tallahassee and future Superior General of the Josephites.[34][35]

Papal visit (1987) edit

In September 1987, Pope John Paul II visited the United States, notably making a stop in New Orleans, which is considered one of the genesis points of Black Catholicism. There he engaged a number of cultural groups, including during a Mass at the Superdome, where jazz and gospel stylings were featured (including a rendition of "Lord, I Want to Be a Christian" sung by Servant of God Sr. Dr. Thea Bowman).[36][37][38]

The next day, the Pope held a private audience with a group of 2,000 Black Catholics from all over the country (including all the nation's Black bishops), speaking to many of their social concerns and praising their "cultural heritage".[33][36][39] During this meeting, a Black Catholic gospel choir sang at least one tune from the previous day's Mass.[40]

Liturgical developments (late 1980s) edit

Also in 1987, the first and only Black Catholic hymnal was published; entitled Lead Me, Guide Me, it integrates numerous traditional Black Gospel hymns alongside a number of traditional Catholic hymns. The preface was penned by noteworthy Black Catholic liturgists Bishop James P. Lyke, future Archbishop of Atlanta; and Fr Norvel, then-president of the NBCCC. The foreword was written by Servant of God Thea Bowman, covering the development and value of African-American Christian worship. Fr J-Glenn Murray, a Black Jesuit, wrote an introduction explaining the compatibility of said worship with the Roman Rite of the Mass.[41][42]

Two years later in 1989, Unity Explosion was founded in Dallas as an annual conference celebrating Black Catholic liturgy and expression. As of 2020, it has developed as a more general Black Catholic advocacy conference sponsored by the USCCB, and is preceded annually by a pre-conference, the Roderick J. Bell Institute for African-American Sacred Music.[43]

That same year, Sr. Dr. Bowman, by then a celebrity of sorts (having appeared on 60 Minutes as well as The 700 Club) but ailing from cancer, was invited to address the USCCB on Black Catholicism. Dressed in a dashiki, she addressed the bishops on the history, legitimacy, and ongoing struggle of the Black Christian patrimony (interspersing the speech with her renditions of a variety of historic Black hymns). She ended the event by having the assembly link arms and join her in singing "We Shall Overcome".[44][45]

Black Catholic rite edit

Despite offers in 1989 from two Black bishops (namely Terry Steib and future Archbishop Wilton Gregory) to sponsor and oversee Stallings's plans for an independent Black Catholic rite, the proposals of the late 80s were not developed.[46] In early August 1989 the Washington Post reported that the NOBC had endorsed the formation of an independent rite, but subsequent reports indicated that no such decision had been officially made.[47]

Fr George Stallings established an independent church in 1989, and was declared in February 1990 by the Archbishop of Washington to have excommunicated himself by his actions. He started a quasi-Catholic denomination, called Imani Temple, at first with one location.[48] In 1989–1990, the Washington Post reported allegations by youths of having had relationships with Stallings when they were underage.[49][50] In 2009 the archdiocese reached a $125,000 settlement with Gamal Awad, who said he was sexually abused at 14 by Stallings and a seminarian.[51]

Watershed moments, rite survey and conclusion (1990s) edit

Fr Cyprian Davis published his History of Black Catholics in the United States (1990), covering Black history from Esteban's expedition in the 16th century to the period of the late 1980s. It remains the primary text for the general history of Black Catholics.[52] That same year in July, he and his fellow Clergy Caucus members established Black Catholic History Month, to be celebrated each year in November.[53]

In 1991, the National Association of Black Catholic Deacons began operations, and that same year, Sr Dr Jamie Phelps helped to revive the annual meetings of the BCTS.[54][55] The Interregional African American Catholic Evangelization Conference (IAACE), a ministry training conference, also began meeting during this period (co-sponsored by the NABCA).[17][56]

St Joseph's Black Catholic Church in Norfolk, having been merged with St Mary of the Immaculate Conception (Towson) in 1961, was renamed as Basilica of Saint Mary of the Immaculate Conception (Norfolk, Virginia). It was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1979. After being restored in 1989 (its 100th anniversary as an independent parish), it was named a minor basilica in 1991: the first "Black basilica" and first minor basilica in Virginia. This was technically the parish's 200th anniversary, as St Joseph's had split off from a segregated White parish (Saint Patrick's) founded in 1791.[57][58]

Around the same time, twin Divine Word priests Charles and Chester Smith, with their fellow Verbites Anthony Clark and Ken Hamilton, established the Bowman-Francis Ministry. This is a Black Catholic youth outreach ministry that also holds an annual Sankofa Conference.[59]

At the behest of the Black Catholic Joint Conference, the annual meeting of the NBCCC, NBSC, NBCSA and NABCD (including the deacons' wives), a survey was taken of Black Catholics in the early 1990s to gauge the need for and interest in an independent rite. The NBCCC formed an African American Catholic Rite Committee (AACRC) and in 1991 published a monograph entitled "Right Rites", offering a proposal for a study that would be presented at the next year's Black Catholic congress. Their plan was much like the one earlier proposed by Stallings. Black Catholic theologian (and future bishop) Edward Braxton proposed an alternative plan, but neither was developed.[60]

Though the 1995 results of the lay survey were ambiguous about a desire for an independent rite, debate ensued. Activists were concerned that the respondents may not have understood that such a rite was intended to be in full and unmitigated union with the rest of the Catholic Church, and wondered if they had been accurately informed about the prospect in general. Some also wondered whether the nation- (and Church-)wide emphasis on multiculturalism during that era had soured the prospect of a Black-centered endeavor.[61]

Since the plenary councils of Baltimore in the 1800s, the bishops had floated similar proposals, but no action had been taken. The NBCCC's AACRC disbanded after the results of the survey were released.[61][47]

Reactions edit

While its more radical factions and experiments (especially the various ordeals in Chicago) were met with plenty of opposition, the movement on the whole was received well by the Church, as seen in the rapid acceptance of Fr Rivers' Black liturgical innovation level after Vatican II. The broad ecumenical (and interfaith) support for even Chicago's most boundary-pushing Black Unity Masses also displayed how much support existed for Black liberation at the time.[10]

That said, the association with Black liberation (and the Black Panthers) did attract the attention of the Chicago Police Department, who surveilled at least one Panther-secured Black Unity Mass in Chicago, noting its uniqueness relative to the average Catholic liturgy (and dismissing it as such).[10] A few months after Clements was named pastor of Holy Angels, the CPD and FBI assassinated his close friend and spiritual mentee Fred Hampton. Clements would celebrate the Funeral Mass.[62]

Hierarchical opinions about Black liturgy notwithstanding, demands from Black Catholics for parishes, pastors bishops, archbishops, and cardinals of their choosing certainly rankled higher-ups from local dioceses all the way to the Vatican. Ambivalence was the most common response.[15]

While most of the requests were eventually granted in one way or another, the resulting pendulum-swing away from radical activism—mirroring the larger decline of Black radicalism toward the end of the 20th century—has left Black Catholicism in something of a holding pattern since.

Legacy edit

While racism continues to be an issue in American Catholicism, the Black Catholic Movement's legacy of inculturation and institutions continues to provide a buffer of sorts, providing previously nonexistent outlets for advocacy, protection, preservation, and perseverance.

With the exception of the NBCLC (now arguably replaced by the NBCC), the major national Black Catholic organizations and conferences continue to meet regularly, 52 years after the movement began and a quarter-century since it informally ended.[6] The NBCC continues to issue a "Pastoral Plan of Action" periodically, and the various organizations have issued a number of statements—together and independently—concerning various issues of importance in the Black (and Black Catholic) community.[63]

Roughly a quarter of Black Catholics worship in historically-Black parishes, and these institutions almost without exception preserve the form of Black Catholic worship and spiritual life developed during the Black Catholic Movement, mostly from the model of the larger Black Church.[64]

In popular culture edit

In 1987, Black Catholic theologian, historian, and liturgist Servant of God Sr. Dr. Thea Bowman was profiled on 60 Minutes by Mike Wallace, whom she at one point famously persuaded to utter the phrase "Black is beautiful."[65] This appearance would catch the eye of Harry Belafonte, who eventually bought the rights to her life story and recruited Whoopi Goldberg to portray her in a biopic.[37] Thea would pass away soon after in 1991 from cancer and the film never materialized.[66]

A year later, however, Goldberg would—ironically enough—portray a gospel-singing Black nun in the 1992 American musical comedy, Sister Act. Its 1993 sequel featured a similar story, with Goldberg's character helping an interracial group of urban Catholic high school students form a choir and perform various forms of African-American music (especially gospel). A sequel is currently in the works for Disney+.[67]

Notable institutions edit

Organizations edit

Conferences edit

  • Black Catholic Joint Conference (annual meeting of the NBCC, NBSC, NBCSA, NABCD, and the deacons' wives)
  • National Black Catholic Congress (NBCC)
  • National Black Catholic Men's Conference
  • National Black Catholic Women's Gathering
  • Archbishop Lyke Conference
  • Unity Explosion
  • Bowman-Francis Ministry
    • Sankofa Conference

Academic edit

Notable figures edit

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Various other dates have been proposed as the date on which the movement began or ended.

References edit

  1. ^ "Inculturation, Liturgical | Encyclopedia.com". www.encyclopedia.com. Retrieved 2020-10-13.
  2. ^ KARKABI, BARBARA (2009-01-16). "Gospel Mass grew its audience over time". Houston Chronicle. Retrieved 2020-10-13.
  3. ^ "Rev. Clarence Rivers | Lyke Foundation". Retrieved 2020-10-13.
  4. ^ Ochs, Stephen J. (1993). Desegregating the altar : the Josephites and the struggle for black priests, 1871-1960 (Louisiana pbk. ed.). Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press. p. 446. ISBN 0-8071-1859-1. OCLC 28646434.
  5. ^ Ap (1991-07-19). "Bishop Harold R. Perry, 74, Dies; First Black Prelate in the Century (Published 1991)". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2020-10-13.
  6. ^ a b c d e Cajka, Oeter (2019-02-26). "The National Black Catholic Clergy Caucus at 50". Cushwa Center for the Study of American Catholicism. Retrieved 2020-10-13.
  7. ^ a b Ochs, Stephen J. (1993). Desegregating the altar : the Josephites and the struggle for black priests, 1871-1960 (Louisiana pbk. ed.). Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press. pp. 447–448. ISBN 0-8071-1859-1. OCLC 28646434.
  8. ^ a b Endres, David J. (2017). Remapping the History of Catholicism in the United States. Washington, D.C.: Catholic University of America Press. pp. 151–154. ISBN 978-0-8132-2970-6. OCLC 993807786.
  9. ^ Times-Picayune, Katy Reckdahl, The. "St. Francis de Sales parishioners protest merger". NOLA.com. Retrieved 2020-10-12.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  10. ^ a b c Cressler, Matthew J. (2017-11-14). Authentically Black and Truly Catholic. United States: NYU Press. pp. 139–140. doi:10.18574/nyu/9781479841325.001.0001. ISBN 978-1-4798-4132-5.
  11. ^ Cressler, Matthew J. (2017-11-14). Authentically Black and Truly Catholic. United States: NYU Press. p. 189. doi:10.18574/nyu/9781479841325.001.0001. ISBN 978-1-4798-4132-5.
  12. ^ Mjagkij, Nina (2003). Organizing Black America : an encyclopedia of African American associations. New York: Taylor & Francis. p. 356. ISBN 0-203-80119-9. OCLC 58389850.
  13. ^ "Black Catholics Criticize Josephites". The Anchor. 1971-07-01. Retrieved 2020-10-13.
  14. ^ Fiske, Edward B. (1971-10-09). "U.S. Negro Catholics Present Grievances at Vatican Meeting (Published 1971)". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2020-10-13.
  15. ^ a b Williams, Shannen Dee (2013). Black nuns and the struggle to desegregate Catholic America after World War I (PhD dissertation). Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey. pp. 264–269. doi:10.7282/T37S7MBS.
  16. ^ Blau, Eleanor (1971-08-21). "Black Nuns Seek Community Rule in Schools (Published 1971)". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2020-10-13.
  17. ^ a b c "History - National Association of Black Catholic Administrators". National Association of Black Catholic Administrators (NABCA). Retrieved 2020-10-16.
  18. ^ Enduring Faith. YouTube. United States: Toward Castle Films, 2000. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9QjPyCXGN7E.
  19. ^ Hoffman, Roy; Press-Register (2011-07-16). "With faith and perseverance the Rev. William Norvel becomes leader of Josephites". al. Retrieved 2020-10-13.
  20. ^ Williams, Shannen Dee (2013). Black nuns and the struggle to desegregate Catholic America after World War I (PhD dissertation). Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey. p. 5. doi:10.7282/T37S7MBS.
  21. ^ Ochs, Stephen J. (1993). Desegregating the altar : the Josephites and the struggle for black priests, 1871-1960 (Louisiana pbk. ed.). Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press. p. 447. ISBN 0-8071-1859-1. OCLC 28646434.
  22. ^ "A Portrait of Black Catholicism: Celebrating 40 years of the Black Catholic Theological Symposium". America Magazine. 2018-01-09. Retrieved 2020-10-13.
  23. ^ Cone, James H.; Wilmore, Gayraud S. (1993). Black theology : a documentary history (2nd ed., rev ed.). Maryknoll, N.Y.: Orbis Books. p. 10. ISBN 0-88344-868-8. OCLC 27186389.
  24. ^ staff, American. "Father Nutt to lead Institute for Black Catholic Studies". St. Louis American. Retrieved 2020-10-13.
  25. ^ . www.xula.edu. Archived from the original on 2020-10-16. Retrieved 2020-10-13.
  26. ^ McCormick, Patrick. "Confessing racism in the Catholic Church". The Spokesman-Review. Retrieved 2020-10-13.
  27. ^ Pattison, Mark (2016-08-10). "Approval for Zairian rite was a long time coming, says Congolese cardinal". Catholic Philly. Retrieved 2020-10-13.
  28. ^ Slotnik, Daniel E. (2019-01-22). "Joseph Howze Is Dead at 95; Groundbreaking African-American Bishop (Published 2019)". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2020-10-13.
  29. ^ "Black Bishops Accuse Catholic Church Of Discrimination". Associated Press. 1985-11-14. Retrieved 2020-10-14.
  30. ^ Martin, Douglas (2000-11-16). "Eugene Marino, Black Archbishop, Dies at 66 (Published 2000)". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2020-10-13.
  31. ^ Ochs, Stephen J. (1993). Desegregating the altar : the Josephites and the struggle for black priests, 1871-1960 (Louisiana pbk. ed.). Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press. p. 453. ISBN 0-8071-1859-1. OCLC 28646434.
  32. ^ Butler, Anthea. "Perspective | The U.S. Catholic Church's last major effort on racism was in 1979. Charlottesville woke it up". The Washington Post. ISSN 0190-8286. Retrieved 2020-10-13.
  33. ^ a b Treadwell, David (1987-09-12). "THE PAPAL VISIT : 'Great Awakening' of Black Catholics Stirs a Bold Beat". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 2020-10-16.
  34. ^ "'Act justly, love goodness': Black Catholics in America". America Magazine. 2017-07-28. Retrieved 2020-10-13.
  35. ^ National Bureau of Economic Research. 2013 tax data. http://www.nber.org/tax-stats/population/eo-bmf/2013/10/eo_mdmz.xls
  36. ^ a b Chandler, Russel (1987-09-13). "THE PAPAL VISIT : Pontiff Deplores Suffering of U.S. Blacks". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 2020-10-16.
  37. ^ a b Nutt, Maurice J. (2019). Thea Bowman : Faithful and Free. Collegeville: Liturgical Press. p. 106. ISBN 978-0-8146-4632-8. OCLC 1101785462.
  38. ^ Suro, Roberto (1987-09-13). "The Papal visit; John Paul assails economic plights of Black in U.S." The New York Times. Retrieved 2020-10-16.
  39. ^ Pope John Paul II (1987-09-12). "To the black Catholic community of New Orleans". The Vatican. from the original on 2020-10-19. Retrieved 2020-10-16.
  40. ^ "The Pope Visits New Orleans CH-4 Eyewitness New Special 1987". YouTube. 2015-10-15. Retrieved 2020-10-16.
  41. ^ Lyke, James P.; Norvel, William; Bowman, Thea; Murray, J-Glenn (1987). Lead Me, Guide Me: The African American Catholic Hymnal. GIA Publications. ISBN 9789992233047.
  42. ^ Lead Me, Guide Me. 1987. Retrieved 2020-10-13. {{cite book}}: |website= ignored (help)
  43. ^ "About Us". Unity Explosion 2020. Retrieved 2020-10-13.
  44. ^ Bowman, Thea (1989). "Sr. Thea's Address to U.S. Bishops". YouTube. United States Conference of Catholic Bishops (USCCB). Retrieved 2020-10-19.
  45. ^ Araujo-Hawkins, Dawn (2018-03-19). "Black spiritual traditions have long history in Catholic Church". Global Sisters Report. Retrieved 2020-10-19.
  46. ^ McGann, Mary (2009). Let It Shine! : the Emergence of African American Catholic Worship. Bronx: Fordham University Press. p. 146. ISBN 978-0-8232-2993-2. OCLC 727645696.
  47. ^ a b Hyer, Marjorie (1989-08-07). "National lay group for Black Catholics backs separate African-American rite". The Washington Post. Retrieved 2020-10-13.
  48. ^ Rosin, Hanna (2001-05-28). "A Member of The Wedding". Washington Post. ISSN 0190-8286. Retrieved 2020-10-13.
  49. ^ Laura Sessions Stepp; Bill Dedman (1990-04-30). "CONCERNS ABOUT STALLINGS'S LIFESTYLE FUELED CONFLICT". The Washington Post. Washington, D.C. ISSN 0190-8286. OCLC 1330888409.
  50. ^ Bill Dedman; Laura Sessions Stepp (1990-05-01). "STALLINGS BUILDS A BLACK CHURCH FAR FROM ROME". The Washington Post. Washington, D.C. ISSN 0190-8286. OCLC 1330888409.
  51. ^ William Wan (October 14, 2009). "Washington Archdiocese Reaches Settlement in Sexual Abuse Lawsuit". Washington Post.
  52. ^ "Benedictine Fr. Cyprian Davis, top chronicler of black Catholic history, dies". National Catholic Reporter. 2015-05-20. Retrieved 2020-10-14.
  53. ^ Scotchie, Nicholas (2020-11-22). "Black Catholic History Month Should Be More Widely Recognized". The Observer. from the original on 2020-11-23. Retrieved 2021-11-20.
  54. ^ Tardy, Mel (2018-10-19). "Out of the Ashes, Justice and Peace". The Deacon. Retrieved 2020-10-14.
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  56. ^ "Interregional African American Catholic Evangelization Conference Archives". Mississippi Catholic. 2016-07-08. Retrieved 2020-10-16.
  57. ^ Burger, John (2018-07-06). "African-American Catholic basilica in Virginia is a testament to history". Aleteia. Retrieved 2020-10-14.
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  61. ^ a b McGann, Mary (2009). Let It Shine! : the Emergence of African American Catholic Worship. Bronx: Fordham University Press. pp. 35–41. ISBN 978-0-8232-2993-2. OCLC 727645696.
  62. ^ Cressler, Matthew J. (2017-11-14). Authentically Black and Truly Catholic. United States: NYU Press. pp. 152–153. doi:10.18574/nyu/9781479841325.001.0001. ISBN 978-1-4798-4132-5.
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Further reading edit

  • Davis, Cyprian. The History of Black Catholics in the United States. United States, Crossroad, 1994. ISBN 9780824514952
  • Hayes, Diana L., and Davis, Cyprian. Taking Down Our Harps: Black Catholics in the United States. United States, Orbis Books, 1998. ISBN 9781570751745
  • Copeland, Mary Shawn. Uncommon Faithfulness: The Black Catholic Experience. United States, Orbis Books, 2009. ISBN 9781608333585
  • Phelps, Jamie Therese. Black and Catholic: The Challenge and Gift of Black Folk : Contributions of African American Experience and Thought to Catholic Theology. United States, Marquette University Press, 1997. ISBN 9780874626292
  • Davis, Darren W., and Pope-Davis, Donald B.. Perseverance in the Parish? Religious Attitudes from a Black Catholic Perspective. United States, Cambridge University Press, 2017. ISBN 9781108127561
  • McGreevy, John T. Parish Boundaries: The Catholic Encounter with Race in the Twentieth-Century Urban North. United States, University of Chicago Press, 2016. ISBN 9780226497471
  • Johnson, Karen J.. One in Christ: Chicago Catholics and the Quest for Interracial Justice. United Kingdom, Oxford University Press, 2018. ISBN 9780190618971
  • Hayes, Worth Kamili. Schools of Our Own: Chicago's Golden Age of Black Private Education. United States, Northwestern University Press, 2019. ISBN 9780810141209

External links edit

  • National Black Catholic Clergy Caucus
  • National Black Sisters Conference
  • National Association of Black Catholic Seminarians
  • National Black Catholic Congress
  • National Association of Black Catholic Deacons
  • Institute for Black Catholic Studies
  • Black Catholic Theological Symposium

black, catholic, movement, black, catholic, revolution, movement, african, american, catholics, united, states, that, developed, shaped, modern, black, catholicism, date1968, 1995, locationunited, statescaused, byassassination, martin, luther, king, racism, se. The Black Catholic Movement or Black Catholic Revolution was a movement of African American Catholics in the United States that developed and shaped modern Black Catholicism Black Catholic MovementDate1968 1995 a LocationUnited StatesCaused byAssassination of Martin Luther King Jr Racism segregation Jim Crow laws socioeconomic inequality Second Vatican CouncilResulted inIntroduction of African American music and spirituality to Catholic liturgy and praxis Redevelopment of many inner city Catholic schools as independent schools run by Black nuns and religious sisters Founding of new Black Catholic organizations National Black Catholic Congress National Black Sisters Conference National Black Catholic Clergy Caucus National Black Catholic Seminarians Association National Association of Black Catholic Deacons National Association of Black Catholic Administrators Appointment of first African American bishops First African American archbishops Increase in number of Black seminarians brothers priests nuns and religious sisters Exploration of possibility for an African American Catholic riteFrom roughly 1968 to the mid 1990s Black Catholicism would transform from pre Vatican II roots into a full member of the Black Church It developed its own structure identity music liturgy thought theology and appearance within the larger Catholic Church As a result in the 21st century Black Catholic Church traditions are seen in most Black parishes institutions schools and organizations across the country Contents 1 Background 1 1 Vatican II 1 2 Membership boom 2 History 2 1 NBCC statement 1968 2 2 Growth 1969 1971 2 3 Education reform Black offices and exodus 1971 1975 2 4 New organizations major thinkers and USCCB letter late 1970s 2 5 George Stallings and Black bishops 1980s 1987 2 6 Papal visit 1987 2 7 Liturgical developments late 1980s 2 7 1 Black Catholic rite 2 8 Watershed moments rite survey and conclusion 1990s 3 Reactions 4 Legacy 5 In popular culture 6 Notable institutions 6 1 Organizations 6 2 Conferences 6 3 Academic 7 Notable figures 8 See also 9 Notes 10 References 11 Further reading 12 External linksBackground editVatican II edit In 1962 Pope John XXIII convened the most recent Catholic ecumenical council Vatican II It eliminated Latin as the required liturgical language of the Western portion of the Church 1 This change opened the door for inculturation in both new and historic areas of practice As early as the 1950s under the creative eye of Black Catholics such as Fr Clarence Rivers the fusion of Protestant originated Black Gospel music with Catholic liturgy had been experimented with on a basic level 2 Rivers s music and musical direction was used at the first official English language Mass in the United States in 1964 including his watershed work God Is Love 3 Membership boom edit Alongside this nascent inculturation came a second boom in Black Catholic numbers as they increased by 220 000 35 during the 1960s and more than half were converts 4 In 1966 Fr Harold R Perry became the first known Black bishop to serve in the US when he was named auxiliary bishop of New Orleans 5 Following the assassination of Martin Luther King and associated riots including Mayor Daley s shoot to kill order in Chicago Black Catholics inaugurated a number of powerful new organizations in early 1968 These included the National Black Catholic Clergy Caucus NBCC organized by Fr Herman Porter and its sister organization the National Black Sisters Conference NBSC organized by Sr Martin de Porres Grey 6 The larger movement or revolution broke out thereafter as Black Catholics increasingly latched onto Black Power and Black Consciousness as appropriate means of expressing their right to be authentically Black in their expression of the Catholic faith 6 History editNBCC statement 1968 edit At the inaugural NBCCC meeting in Detroit caucus members declared in the opening line of their statement that the Catholic Church in the United States is primarily a White racist institution 6 The statement made waves throughout the Church It provided perspective on the riots that were so intensely discomforting White American and White Catholic sensibilities and was part of the demands for change in the Catholic Church including an active commitment to Black self oversight freedom and vocations More specifically they demanded a Black vicariate an episcopal vicar a Black led office for Black Catholics Black diaconate Black liturgical inculturation inclusion of Black history and culture in seminary education and diocesan programs for training those who intended to shepherd Black Catholics Without such changes the caucus claimed the Catholic Church would soon become irrelevant to the Black community 7 At least two of these requests were answered rather quickly With the support of a White Josephite superior general who advocated for it as early as 1967 the permanent diaconate was restored in the United States in October 1968 and the National Office for Black Catholics NOBC was established in 1970 7 Growth 1969 1971 edit The movement revolution centered in Chicago where numerous Black Catholics resided in the late 1960s forming sizable Black parishes But these were always under the leadership of White priests Fr George Clements one of the more radical ized members of the inaugural NBCCC meeting entered into an extended row with Archbishop John Cody over this lack of Black pastors in Chicago and Black Catholic inculturation 8 Unconventional alliances with local Black Protestant leaders and Black radical activists resulted in innovative and defiant liturgical celebrations known as the Black Unity Mass trans parochial events where Black priests donned Afrocentric vestments decorated the altar similarly and celebrated the Mass with a decidedly Black liturgical flair One such Mass in 1969 included New York activist priest Lawrence Lucas an 80 voice gospel choir provided by the Rev Jesse Jackson and security provided by the Black Panthers 8 One of the first parishes to engage in Black liturgical inculturation and establish a gospel choir was St Francis de Sales Catholic Church in New Orleans in 1969 It is now known as St Katharine Drexel Church 9 One of the first musicians to experiment similarly was Grayson Warren Brown a Presbyterian convert who set the entire Mass to gospel style music Fr William Norvel a Josephite helped introduce gospel choirs to Black Catholic parishes nationwide especially in Washington D C and Los Angeles This Gospel Mass trend quickly spread across the nation 10 Even as these new changes swept through the emerging Black Catholic Church so too did the backlash and general unease with which many Black Catholics held their faith As they embraced a more robust Black nationalism it often clashed with all they knew Catholicism to represent 11 This sentiment was not limited to laypeople nor did was it contradicted by White reactions to the movement revolution as many dioceses religious orders parishes and lay groups reacted negatively to both the Civil Rights and Black Power movements on the whole citation needed In 1970 the National Black Catholic Lay Caucus NBCLC or NBLCC was founded It partnered with the NBCCC NBSC NBCSA and NOBC in combating the marginalization of Blacks At their first meeting in August of that year they drafted a resolution echoing the demands of the inaugural NBCCC meeting two years prior In addition they added new demands such as four Black bishops greater lay and youth decision making power and hierarchical support in developing an African American liturgy 12 In summer 1971 the NBCLC staged a sit in at the Josephites headquarters demanding similar changes 13 Education reform Black offices and exodus 1971 1975 edit After the NOBC was allotted only 30 of their requested funding for 1970 by the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops USCCB and after Cardinal O Boyle a staunch supporter of Civil Rights announced his retirement a delegation of Black Catholics led by the NBCLC president brought their grievances to the Vatican in 1971 They informed Deputy Secretary of State Abp Giovanni Benelli that the American bishops had been lying to Rome about the state of Black Catholicism which was bleeding members and dying They demanded that a Black man be appointed as the next Archbishop of Washington D C an African American rite be created and an African American cardinal be named 14 15 That same year the NBSC NOBC and various Black Catholic laypeople spearheaded a national campaign to stop the mass closings of Catholic schools in urban and predominantly Black communities In many cases neglected and or to be shuttered Black Catholic schools were adapted as community led institutions Much like the period some 125 years prior Black nuns led a movement to educate Black children in a time when the American and Catholic White hierarchy did not seem to care to 16 During this same period Black Catholic ministries began to pop up in dioceses around the country often in response to hostile conditions and with pushback from many Black Catholics themselves 17 The unrest extended into seminaries as well At the Josephites tensions between the more race conscious Black students members and their White peers as well as with teachers elders Black and White boiled over into open hostility Many students left the seminary and a number of Josephite priests resigned By 1971 the seminary had closed for studies To this day Josephite seminarians study at nearby universities and their vocations from Black Americans has never recovered 18 19 A wave of resignations by priests occurred across Black Catholicism in the 1970s and coincided with a general nadir of American Catholicism overall the latter being more or less unrelated to race issues Catholics of all races began lapsing in droves Between 1970 and 1975 hundreds of Black Catholic seminarians dozens 13 of Black Catholic priests and 125 Black nuns 14 left their posts including NBCS foundress Sr Martin de Porres Grey in 1974 Up to 20 of Black Catholics stopped practicing 20 21 New organizations major thinkers and USCCB letter late 1970s edit Even with the decline in vocations and lay practice during the 1970s various new national Black Catholic organizations emerged by the end of the decade During the early to mid 70s the various and largely informal Black Catholic diocesan offices ministries began to gain official recognition and approval In 1976 their leaders formed a consortium known as the National Association of Black Catholic Administrators 6 The next year the NOBC became a member and eventually the NABCA subsumed the NOBC altogether 17 The Black Catholic Theological Symposium BCTS a yearly gathering dedicated to the promotion of Black Catholic theology emerged in 1978 in Baltimore From it has come some of the leading voices not only in Black Catholic theology but in Womanist and Black theology as well a founder of one of the watershed organizations of the latter movement the National Council of Black Churchmen or NCBC was the aforementioned Fr Lucas Writers such as Dr Diana L Hayes Dr M Shawn Copeland Sr Jamie T Phelps Fr Cyprian Davis and Servant of God Thea Bowman have had an immeasurable influence in advancing the cause of Black Catholic history theology theory and liturgy 22 23 The next year in 1979 the Institute for Black Catholic Studies was founded at Xavier University of Louisiana Every summer since it has hosted a variety of accredited courses on Black Catholic theology ministry ethics and history offering a Continuing Education and Enrichment program as well as a Master of Theology degree It is the only graduate theology program in the western hemisphere taught from a Black Catholic perspective 24 25 That same year the USCCB issued a pastoral letter dissecting and condemning racism entitled Brothers and Sisters to Us for the first time addressing the issue in a group publication 26 George Stallings and Black bishops 1980s 1987 edit Fr George Stallings a Black Catholic priest known for his fiery activism and no holds barred demands of the Church pressed for a Black Catholic rite complete with bishops and the associated episcopal structure during the 70s and 80s this bold request was intended to give Black Catholics the kind of independence many were calling for at the time 27 In 1974 Eugene A Marino was named auxiliary bishop of Washington and Joseph L Howze became the first recognized Black Catholic bishop of a diocese when he was named Bishop of Biloxi in 1977 28 Marino would become the first ever Black Catholic archbishop in 1988 following an open demand made to the USCCB in 1985 29 Marino resigned from his archbishopric two years after his appointment following a sex scandal related to his secret marriage and impregnation of a Church employee 30 Between 1966 and 1988 the Holy See would name 13 Black bishops In 1984 they would issue their own pastoral letter entitled What We Have Seen and Heard explaining the nature value and strength of Black Catholicism 31 32 The next year the United States Catholic Conference a predecessor organization to the USCCB with the help of Servant of God Sr Dr Thea Bowman issued a document titled Families Black and Catholic Catholic and Black encouraging Black Catholics to maintain Black cultural traditions 33 In 1987 the National Black Catholic Congress NBCC emerged as a purported successor to Daniel Rudd s Colored Catholic Congress movement of the late 19th century It was founded as a nonprofit in conjunction with the NABCA and under the name of Fr John Ricard future bishop of Pensacola Tallahassee and future Superior General of the Josephites 34 35 Papal visit 1987 edit In September 1987 Pope John Paul II visited the United States notably making a stop in New Orleans which is considered one of the genesis points of Black Catholicism There he engaged a number of cultural groups including during a Mass at the Superdome where jazz and gospel stylings were featured including a rendition of Lord I Want to Be a Christian sung by Servant of God Sr Dr Thea Bowman 36 37 38 The next day the Pope held a private audience with a group of 2 000 Black Catholics from all over the country including all the nation s Black bishops speaking to many of their social concerns and praising their cultural heritage 33 36 39 During this meeting a Black Catholic gospel choir sang at least one tune from the previous day s Mass 40 Liturgical developments late 1980s edit Also in 1987 the first and only Black Catholic hymnal was published entitled Lead Me Guide Me it integrates numerous traditional Black Gospel hymns alongside a number of traditional Catholic hymns The preface was penned by noteworthy Black Catholic liturgists Bishop James P Lyke future Archbishop of Atlanta and Fr Norvel then president of the NBCCC The foreword was written by Servant of God Thea Bowman covering the development and value of African American Christian worship Fr J Glenn Murray a Black Jesuit wrote an introduction explaining the compatibility of said worship with the Roman Rite of the Mass 41 42 Two years later in 1989 Unity Explosion was founded in Dallas as an annual conference celebrating Black Catholic liturgy and expression As of 2020 it has developed as a more general Black Catholic advocacy conference sponsored by the USCCB and is preceded annually by a pre conference the Roderick J Bell Institute for African American Sacred Music 43 That same year Sr Dr Bowman by then a celebrity of sorts having appeared on 60 Minutes as well as The 700 Club but ailing from cancer was invited to address the USCCB on Black Catholicism Dressed in a dashiki she addressed the bishops on the history legitimacy and ongoing struggle of the Black Christian patrimony interspersing the speech with her renditions of a variety of historic Black hymns She ended the event by having the assembly link arms and join her in singing We Shall Overcome 44 45 Black Catholic rite edit Despite offers in 1989 from two Black bishops namely Terry Steib and future Archbishop Wilton Gregory to sponsor and oversee Stallings s plans for an independent Black Catholic rite the proposals of the late 80s were not developed 46 In early August 1989 the Washington Post reported that the NOBC had endorsed the formation of an independent rite but subsequent reports indicated that no such decision had been officially made 47 Fr George Stallings established an independent church in 1989 and was declared in February 1990 by the Archbishop of Washington to have excommunicated himself by his actions He started a quasi Catholic denomination called Imani Temple at first with one location 48 In 1989 1990 the Washington Post reported allegations by youths of having had relationships with Stallings when they were underage 49 50 In 2009 the archdiocese reached a 125 000 settlement with Gamal Awad who said he was sexually abused at 14 by Stallings and a seminarian 51 Watershed moments rite survey and conclusion 1990s edit Fr Cyprian Davis published his History of Black Catholics in the United States 1990 covering Black history from Esteban s expedition in the 16th century to the period of the late 1980s It remains the primary text for the general history of Black Catholics 52 That same year in July he and his fellow Clergy Caucus members established Black Catholic History Month to be celebrated each year in November 53 In 1991 the National Association of Black Catholic Deacons began operations and that same year Sr Dr Jamie Phelps helped to revive the annual meetings of the BCTS 54 55 The Interregional African American Catholic Evangelization Conference IAACE a ministry training conference also began meeting during this period co sponsored by the NABCA 17 56 St Joseph s Black Catholic Church in Norfolk having been merged with St Mary of the Immaculate Conception Towson in 1961 was renamed as Basilica of Saint Mary of the Immaculate Conception Norfolk Virginia It was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1979 After being restored in 1989 its 100th anniversary as an independent parish it was named a minor basilica in 1991 the first Black basilica and first minor basilica in Virginia This was technically the parish s 200th anniversary as St Joseph s had split off from a segregated White parish Saint Patrick s founded in 1791 57 58 Around the same time twin Divine Word priests Charles and Chester Smith with their fellow Verbites Anthony Clark and Ken Hamilton established the Bowman Francis Ministry This is a Black Catholic youth outreach ministry that also holds an annual Sankofa Conference 59 At the behest of the Black Catholic Joint Conference the annual meeting of the NBCCC NBSC NBCSA and NABCD including the deacons wives a survey was taken of Black Catholics in the early 1990s to gauge the need for and interest in an independent rite The NBCCC formed an African American Catholic Rite Committee AACRC and in 1991 published a monograph entitled Right Rites offering a proposal for a study that would be presented at the next year s Black Catholic congress Their plan was much like the one earlier proposed by Stallings Black Catholic theologian and future bishop Edward Braxton proposed an alternative plan but neither was developed 60 Though the 1995 results of the lay survey were ambiguous about a desire for an independent rite debate ensued Activists were concerned that the respondents may not have understood that such a rite was intended to be in full and unmitigated union with the rest of the Catholic Church and wondered if they had been accurately informed about the prospect in general Some also wondered whether the nation and Church wide emphasis on multiculturalism during that era had soured the prospect of a Black centered endeavor 61 Since the plenary councils of Baltimore in the 1800s the bishops had floated similar proposals but no action had been taken The NBCCC s AACRC disbanded after the results of the survey were released 61 47 Reactions editWhile its more radical factions and experiments especially the various ordeals in Chicago were met with plenty of opposition the movement on the whole was received well by the Church as seen in the rapid acceptance of Fr Rivers Black liturgical innovation level after Vatican II The broad ecumenical and interfaith support for even Chicago s most boundary pushing Black Unity Masses also displayed how much support existed for Black liberation at the time 10 That said the association with Black liberation and the Black Panthers did attract the attention of the Chicago Police Department who surveilled at least one Panther secured Black Unity Mass in Chicago noting its uniqueness relative to the average Catholic liturgy and dismissing it as such 10 A few months after Clements was named pastor of Holy Angels the CPD and FBI assassinated his close friend and spiritual mentee Fred Hampton Clements would celebrate the Funeral Mass 62 Hierarchical opinions about Black liturgy notwithstanding demands from Black Catholics for parishes pastors bishops archbishops and cardinals of their choosing certainly rankled higher ups from local dioceses all the way to the Vatican Ambivalence was the most common response 15 While most of the requests were eventually granted in one way or another the resulting pendulum swing away from radical activism mirroring the larger decline of Black radicalism toward the end of the 20th century has left Black Catholicism in something of a holding pattern since Legacy editWhile racism continues to be an issue in American Catholicism the Black Catholic Movement s legacy of inculturation and institutions continues to provide a buffer of sorts providing previously nonexistent outlets for advocacy protection preservation and perseverance With the exception of the NBCLC now arguably replaced by the NBCC the major national Black Catholic organizations and conferences continue to meet regularly 52 years after the movement began and a quarter century since it informally ended 6 The NBCC continues to issue a Pastoral Plan of Action periodically and the various organizations have issued a number of statements together and independently concerning various issues of importance in the Black and Black Catholic community 63 Roughly a quarter of Black Catholics worship in historically Black parishes and these institutions almost without exception preserve the form of Black Catholic worship and spiritual life developed during the Black Catholic Movement mostly from the model of the larger Black Church 64 In popular culture editIn 1987 Black Catholic theologian historian and liturgist Servant of God Sr Dr Thea Bowman was profiled on 60 Minutes by Mike Wallace whom she at one point famously persuaded to utter the phrase Black is beautiful 65 This appearance would catch the eye of Harry Belafonte who eventually bought the rights to her life story and recruited Whoopi Goldberg to portray her in a biopic 37 Thea would pass away soon after in 1991 from cancer and the film never materialized 66 A year later however Goldberg would ironically enough portray a gospel singing Black nun in the 1992 American musical comedy Sister Act Its 1993 sequel featured a similar story with Goldberg s character helping an interracial group of urban Catholic high school students form a choir and perform various forms of African American music especially gospel A sequel is currently in the works for Disney 67 Notable institutions editOrganizations edit National Black Catholic Clergy Caucus NBCCC National Black Catholic Seminarians Association NBCSA National Black Sisters Conference NBSC National Association of Black Catholic Deacons NABCD National Association of Black Catholic Administrators NABCA Interregional African American Catholic Evangelization Conference IAACEC Conferences edit Black Catholic Joint Conference annual meeting of the NBCC NBSC NBCSA NABCD and the deacons wives National Black Catholic Congress NBCC National Black Catholic Men s Conference National Black Catholic Women s Gathering Archbishop Lyke Conference Unity Explosion Bowman Francis Ministry Sankofa ConferenceAcademic edit Institute for Black Catholic Studies IBCS Black Catholic Theological Symposium BCTS Notable figures editFather Herman Porter Bishop Joseph Francis Father George Clements Sister Dr Martin de Porres Grey RSM now Dr Patricia Grey Sister Mary Antona Ebo Sister Mary Shawn Copeland OP now Dr M Shawn Copeland Sister Jamie Phelps OP Father Clarence Rivers Servant of God Sister Dr Thea Bowman Father Cyprian Davis OSB Rawn Harbor Archbishop James Lyke Fr J Glenn Murray SJ Bishop Harold Perry Father Lawrence Lucas Father William Norvel SSJ Father Charles Smith SVD Father Chester Smith SVD Father Anthony Clark SVD Father Ken Hamilton SVD Roderick J Bell Bishop John Ricard SSJ Archbishop Wilton Gregory Bishop Terry Steib Father George Stallings Charles Hammock Joseph Dulin Estelle Collins Brother Joseph Davis SM Father Edwin Cabey Bishop Joseph L Howze Archbishop Eugene Marino Father Charles Burns Father Albert McKnightSee also editBlack Catholicism National Black Catholic Congress Institute for Black Catholic Studies Black Catholic Theological SymposiumNotes edit Various other dates have been proposed as the date on which the movement began or ended References edit Inculturation Liturgical Encyclopedia com www encyclopedia com Retrieved 2020 10 13 KARKABI BARBARA 2009 01 16 Gospel Mass grew its audience over time Houston Chronicle Retrieved 2020 10 13 Rev Clarence Rivers Lyke Foundation Retrieved 2020 10 13 Ochs Stephen J 1993 Desegregating the altar the Josephites and the struggle for black priests 1871 1960 Louisiana pbk ed Baton Rouge Louisiana State University Press p 446 ISBN 0 8071 1859 1 OCLC 28646434 Ap 1991 07 19 Bishop Harold R Perry 74 Dies First Black Prelate in the Century Published 1991 The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 2020 10 13 a b c d e Cajka Oeter 2019 02 26 The National Black Catholic Clergy Caucus at 50 Cushwa Center for the Study of American Catholicism Retrieved 2020 10 13 a b Ochs Stephen J 1993 Desegregating the altar the Josephites and the struggle for black priests 1871 1960 Louisiana pbk ed Baton Rouge Louisiana State University Press pp 447 448 ISBN 0 8071 1859 1 OCLC 28646434 a b Endres David J 2017 Remapping the History of Catholicism in the United States Washington D C Catholic University of America Press pp 151 154 ISBN 978 0 8132 2970 6 OCLC 993807786 Times Picayune Katy Reckdahl The St Francis de Sales parishioners protest merger NOLA com Retrieved 2020 10 12 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link a b c Cressler Matthew J 2017 11 14 Authentically Black and Truly Catholic United States NYU Press pp 139 140 doi 10 18574 nyu 9781479841325 001 0001 ISBN 978 1 4798 4132 5 Cressler Matthew J 2017 11 14 Authentically Black and Truly Catholic United States NYU Press p 189 doi 10 18574 nyu 9781479841325 001 0001 ISBN 978 1 4798 4132 5 Mjagkij Nina 2003 Organizing Black America an encyclopedia of African American associations New York Taylor amp Francis p 356 ISBN 0 203 80119 9 OCLC 58389850 Black Catholics Criticize Josephites The Anchor 1971 07 01 Retrieved 2020 10 13 Fiske Edward B 1971 10 09 U S Negro Catholics Present Grievances at Vatican Meeting Published 1971 The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 2020 10 13 a b Williams Shannen Dee 2013 Black nuns and the struggle to desegregate Catholic America after World War I PhD dissertation Rutgers The State University of New Jersey pp 264 269 doi 10 7282 T37S7MBS Blau Eleanor 1971 08 21 Black Nuns Seek Community Rule in Schools Published 1971 The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 2020 10 13 a b c History National Association of Black Catholic Administrators National Association of Black Catholic Administrators NABCA Retrieved 2020 10 16 Enduring Faith YouTube United States Toward Castle Films 2000 https www youtube com watch v 9QjPyCXGN7E Hoffman Roy Press Register 2011 07 16 With faith and perseverance the Rev William Norvel becomes leader of Josephites al Retrieved 2020 10 13 Williams Shannen Dee 2013 Black nuns and the struggle to desegregate Catholic America after World War I PhD dissertation Rutgers The State University of New Jersey p 5 doi 10 7282 T37S7MBS Ochs Stephen J 1993 Desegregating the altar the Josephites and the struggle for black priests 1871 1960 Louisiana pbk ed Baton Rouge Louisiana State University Press p 447 ISBN 0 8071 1859 1 OCLC 28646434 A Portrait of Black Catholicism Celebrating 40 years of the Black Catholic Theological Symposium America Magazine 2018 01 09 Retrieved 2020 10 13 Cone James H Wilmore Gayraud S 1993 Black theology a documentary history 2nd ed rev ed Maryknoll N Y Orbis Books p 10 ISBN 0 88344 868 8 OCLC 27186389 staff American Father Nutt to lead Institute for Black Catholic Studies St Louis American Retrieved 2020 10 13 Xavier University of Louisiana www xula edu Archived from the original on 2020 10 16 Retrieved 2020 10 13 McCormick Patrick Confessing racism in the Catholic Church The Spokesman Review Retrieved 2020 10 13 Pattison Mark 2016 08 10 Approval for Zairian rite was a long time coming says Congolese cardinal Catholic Philly Retrieved 2020 10 13 Slotnik Daniel E 2019 01 22 Joseph Howze Is Dead at 95 Groundbreaking African American Bishop Published 2019 The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 2020 10 13 Black Bishops Accuse Catholic Church Of Discrimination Associated Press 1985 11 14 Retrieved 2020 10 14 Martin Douglas 2000 11 16 Eugene Marino Black Archbishop Dies at 66 Published 2000 The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 2020 10 13 Ochs Stephen J 1993 Desegregating the altar the Josephites and the struggle for black priests 1871 1960 Louisiana pbk ed Baton Rouge Louisiana State University Press p 453 ISBN 0 8071 1859 1 OCLC 28646434 Butler Anthea Perspective The U S Catholic Church s last major effort on racism was in 1979 Charlottesville woke it up The Washington Post ISSN 0190 8286 Retrieved 2020 10 13 a b Treadwell David 1987 09 12 THE PAPAL VISIT Great Awakening of Black Catholics Stirs a Bold Beat Los Angeles Times Retrieved 2020 10 16 Act justly love goodness Black Catholics in America America Magazine 2017 07 28 Retrieved 2020 10 13 National Bureau of Economic Research 2013 tax data http www nber org tax stats population eo bmf 2013 10 eo mdmz xls a b Chandler Russel 1987 09 13 THE PAPAL VISIT Pontiff Deplores Suffering of U S Blacks Los Angeles Times Retrieved 2020 10 16 a b Nutt Maurice J 2019 Thea Bowman Faithful and Free Collegeville Liturgical Press p 106 ISBN 978 0 8146 4632 8 OCLC 1101785462 Suro Roberto 1987 09 13 The Papal visit John Paul assails economic plights of Black in U S The New York Times Retrieved 2020 10 16 Pope John Paul II 1987 09 12 To the black Catholic community of New Orleans The Vatican Archived from the original on 2020 10 19 Retrieved 2020 10 16 The Pope Visits New Orleans CH 4 Eyewitness New Special 1987 YouTube 2015 10 15 Retrieved 2020 10 16 Lyke James P Norvel William Bowman Thea Murray J Glenn 1987 Lead Me Guide Me The African American Catholic Hymnal GIA Publications ISBN 9789992233047 Lead Me Guide Me 1987 Retrieved 2020 10 13 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a website ignored help About Us Unity Explosion 2020 Retrieved 2020 10 13 Bowman Thea 1989 Sr Thea s Address to U S Bishops YouTube United States Conference of Catholic Bishops USCCB Retrieved 2020 10 19 Araujo Hawkins Dawn 2018 03 19 Black spiritual traditions have long history in Catholic Church Global Sisters Report Retrieved 2020 10 19 McGann Mary 2009 Let It Shine the Emergence of African American Catholic Worship Bronx Fordham University Press p 146 ISBN 978 0 8232 2993 2 OCLC 727645696 a b Hyer Marjorie 1989 08 07 National lay group for Black Catholics backs separate African American rite The Washington Post Retrieved 2020 10 13 Rosin Hanna 2001 05 28 A Member of The Wedding Washington Post ISSN 0190 8286 Retrieved 2020 10 13 Laura Sessions Stepp Bill Dedman 1990 04 30 CONCERNS ABOUT STALLINGS S LIFESTYLE FUELED CONFLICT The Washington Post Washington D C ISSN 0190 8286 OCLC 1330888409 Bill Dedman Laura Sessions Stepp 1990 05 01 STALLINGS BUILDS A BLACK CHURCH FAR FROM ROME The Washington Post Washington D C ISSN 0190 8286 OCLC 1330888409 William Wan October 14 2009 Washington Archdiocese Reaches Settlement in Sexual Abuse Lawsuit Washington Post Benedictine Fr Cyprian Davis top chronicler of black Catholic history dies National Catholic Reporter 2015 05 20 Retrieved 2020 10 14 Scotchie Nicholas 2020 11 22 Black Catholic History Month Should Be More Widely Recognized The Observer Archived from the original on 2020 11 23 Retrieved 2021 11 20 Tardy Mel 2018 10 19 Out of the Ashes Justice and Peace The Deacon Retrieved 2020 10 14 St Norbert Hosts Black Catholic Theological Symposium St Norbert College www snc edu Retrieved 2020 10 14 Interregional African American Catholic Evangelization Conference Archives Mississippi Catholic 2016 07 08 Retrieved 2020 10 16 Burger John 2018 07 06 African American Catholic basilica in Virginia is a testament to history Aleteia Retrieved 2020 10 14 McCabe Robert 2020 07 03 The life we ve been living Historic Black Catholic Church in Norfolk Virginia looks to the future National Catholic Reporter Retrieved 2020 10 14 Bowman Francis Ministries Divine Word Missionaries Retrieved 2020 10 14 McGann Mary 2009 Let It Shine the Emergence of African American Catholic Worship Bronx Fordham University Press pp 26 28 ISBN 978 0 8232 2993 2 OCLC 727645696 a b McGann Mary 2009 Let It Shine the Emergence of African American Catholic Worship Bronx Fordham University Press pp 35 41 ISBN 978 0 8232 2993 2 OCLC 727645696 Cressler Matthew J 2017 11 14 Authentically Black and Truly Catholic United States NYU Press pp 152 153 doi 10 18574 nyu 9781479841325 001 0001 ISBN 978 1 4798 4132 5 Pastoral Plans The National Black Catholic Congress Retrieved 2020 10 14 Demographics United States Conference of Catholic Bishops USCCB Retrieved 2020 10 12 Polletta Dan 2018 10 30 One Woman Show Celebrates the Work of Sister Thea Bowman ideastream Retrieved 2020 10 16 Smith Charlene Feister John 2009 Thea s song The Life of Thea Bowman Maryknoll N Y Orbis Books p 269 ISBN 978 1 60833 045 4 OCLC 1030900580 Fuge Jon 2020 10 08 Sister Act 3 Is Trying to Reunite the Original Cast Teases Whoopi Goldberg Movieweb Retrieved 2020 10 15 Further reading editDavis Cyprian The History of Black Catholics in the United States United States Crossroad 1994 ISBN 9780824514952 Hayes Diana L and Davis Cyprian Taking Down Our Harps Black Catholics in the United States United States Orbis Books 1998 ISBN 9781570751745 Copeland Mary Shawn Uncommon Faithfulness The Black Catholic Experience United States Orbis Books 2009 ISBN 9781608333585 Phelps Jamie Therese Black and Catholic The Challenge and Gift of Black Folk Contributions of African American Experience and Thought to Catholic Theology United States Marquette University Press 1997 ISBN 9780874626292 Davis Darren W and Pope Davis Donald B Perseverance in the Parish Religious Attitudes from a Black Catholic Perspective United States Cambridge University Press 2017 ISBN 9781108127561 McGreevy John T Parish Boundaries The Catholic Encounter with Race in the Twentieth Century Urban North United States University of Chicago Press 2016 ISBN 9780226497471 Johnson Karen J One in Christ Chicago Catholics and the Quest for Interracial Justice United Kingdom Oxford University Press 2018 ISBN 9780190618971 Hayes Worth Kamili Schools of Our Own Chicago s Golden Age of Black Private Education United States Northwestern University Press 2019 ISBN 9780810141209External links editNational Black Catholic Clergy Caucus National Black Sisters Conference National Association of Black Catholic Seminarians National Black Catholic Congress National Association of Black Catholic Deacons Institute for Black Catholic Studies Black Catholic Theological Symposium Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Black Catholic Movement amp oldid 1191469115, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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