Throughout U.S. history, religious preferences and racial segregation have fostered development of separate black church denominations, as well as black churches within white denominations.
Methodism (inclusive of the holiness movement) African Americans were drawn to
Methodism due to the father of Methodism,
John Wesley's "opposition to the whole system of slavery, his commitment to Jesus Christ, and the evangelical appeal to the suffering and the oppressed."
African Methodist Episcopal Church The first of these churches was the
African Methodist Episcopal Church. In the late 18th century, former slave
Richard Allen, a Methodist preacher, was an influential
deacon and elder at the integrated and affluent
St. George's Methodist Church in
Philadelphia. The charismatic Allen had attracted numerous new black members to St. George's. White members had become so uncomfortable that they relegated black worshipers to a segregated gallery. After white members of St. George's started to treat his people as second-class citizens, in 1787 Allen,
Absalom Jones, also a preacher; and other black members left St. George's. They first established the non-denominational
Free African Society, which acted as a mutual aid society. Religious differences caused Jones to take numerous followers to create an Episcopal congregation. They established the
African Episcopal Church of St. Thomas, which opened its doors in 1794. Absalom Jones was later ordained by the bishop of the Philadelphia diocese as the first African-American priest in the Episcopal Church. Allen continued for some years within the Methodist denomination but organized a black congregation. By 1794 he and his followers opened the doors of the
Mother Bethel AME Church. Over time, Allen and others sought more independence from white supervision within the Methodist Church. In 1816 Allen gathered four other black congregations together in the mid-Atlantic region to establish the African Methodist Episcopal Church as an independent denomination, the first fully independent black denomination. The ministers consecrated Allen as their first bishop.
African Methodist Episcopal Zion Church The African Methodist Episcopal Zion or AME Zion Church, like the AME Church, is an offshoot of the
Methodist Episcopal Church. Black members of the
John Street Methodist Church of New York City left to form their own church after several acts of overt discrimination by white members. In 1796, Black Methodists asked the permission of the
bishop of the Methodist Episcopal Church to meet independently, though still to be part of that church and led by white preachers. This AME Church group built Zion chapel in 1800 and became incorporated in 1801, still subordinate to the Methodist Episcopal Church. In 1820, AME Zion Church members began further separation from the Methodist Episcopal Church. By seeking to install black preachers and elders, they created a debate over whether black people could be ministers. This debate ended in 1822 with the ordination of Abraham Thompson, Leven Smith, and
James Varick, the first superintendent (bishop) of the AME Zion Church. After the American Civil War, the denomination sent missionaries to the South and attracted thousands of new members, who shaped the church.
Other Baptist denominations •
Full Gospel Baptist Church Fellowship •
National Baptist Convention of America International, Inc. •
National Missionary Baptist Convention of America •
Progressive National Baptist Convention Pentecostalism Church of God in Christ In 1907,
Charles Harrison Mason formed the Church of God in Christ after his Baptist church and the Mississippi Convention of the NBC USA expelled him. Mason was a member of the
Holiness movement of the late 19th century. In 1906, he attended the
Azusa Street Revival in
Los Angeles. Upon his return to
Tennessee, he began teaching the
Holiness Pentecostal message. However,
Charles Price Jones and J. A. Jeter of the Wesleyan Holiness movement disagreed with Mason's teachings on the
Baptism of the Holy Spirit. Jones changed the name of his COGIC church to the
Church of Christ (Holiness) USA in 1915. At a conference in
Memphis, Tennessee, Mason reorganized the Church of God in Christ as a Holiness Pentecostal body. The headquarters of COGIC is
Mason Temple in
Memphis, Tennessee. It is the site of
Martin Luther King's final sermon, "
I've Been to the Mountaintop", delivered the day before he was assassinated.
Other Pentecostal denominations , 1973 •
United Holy Church of America •
Apostolic Faith Mission •
Apostolic Faith Mission Church of God •
Church of Our Lord Jesus Christ of the Apostolic Faith •
Fire Baptized Holiness Church of God of the Americas •
Mount Sinai Holy Church of America •
Pentecostal Assemblies of the World •
United House of Prayer for All People •
United Pentecostal Council of the Assemblies of God, Incorporated Black Catholicism Birthed from pre-U.S. communities in New Orleans, Baltimore, and Florida, among others, the presence of African American Catholics in the United States territories constitute some of the earliest Black communities on the entire continent. Beginning in the early 19th century, Black Catholic religious sisters began forming congregations to serve their communities, beginning with
Mary Elizabeth Lange and
Henriette DeLille, who founded the
Oblate Sisters of Providence and
Sisters of the Holy Family, respectively. They were soon followed by the emergence of openly Black priests, the first being Fr
Augustus Tolton in 1886. The
Society of St Joseph of the Sacred Heart (aka the
Josephites), a group of priests tasked with serving African-Americans specifically, were formed in 1893 and began ordaining Black men immediately—though in small numbers. They staffed and formed Black parishes throughout the country, and today continue to serve in the same way (as do the two aforementioned sisterhoods, as well as the
Franciscan Handmaids of the Most Pure Heart of Mary). After the Civil Rights Movement, various new Black Catholic organizations were founded for Black priests, sisters, deacons, and seminarians, and the
National Black Catholic Congress arrived in 1987. African-American Catholic priests greatly increased in number and African-American bishops began being appointed, including archbishops.
Wilton Gregory, the first African American cardinal, was named in 2020. == See also ==