An Ex-Colored Church: Cme Church
Stock No: WW549036
An Ex-Colored Church: Cme Church  -     By: Raymond R. Sommerville Jr.

An Ex-Colored Church: Cme Church

Mercer University Press / 2004 / Paperback

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Stock No: WW549036

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Product Information

Title: An Ex-Colored Church: Cme Church
By: Raymond R. Sommerville Jr.
Format: Paperback
Number of Pages: 260
Vendor: Mercer University Press
Publication Date: 2004
Dimensions: 8.88 X 5.98 X 0.74 (inches)
Weight: 13 ounces
ISBN: 0865549036
ISBN-13: 9780865549036
Series: Voices of the African Diaspora
Stock No: WW549036

Publisher's Description

The Christian Methodist Episcopal Church was an important part of the historic freedom struggles of African Americans from Reconstruction to the Civil Rights movement. This fight for equality and freedom can be seen clearly in the denomination's evolving social and ecumenical consciousness. The denomination's very name changed from "Colored" to "Christian" in 1954, but the denomination did not join the struggle late. Rather, the CME was a critical participant from the days following the Civil War. At times, the Church was at odds with their white Methodist counterparts and in solidarity with other African-American denominations on issues of racial desegregation and the role of social protest in religion.Raymond Sommerville's important book discusses the relationship between Martin Luther King, Jr. and the Southern Christian Leadership Conference and the CME. While King and others received most of the headlines during the Civil Rights Era, the CME proved to be involved at all levels and equally important in all they did. With its strategic location in the South and its long history of ecumenical involvement, the CME Church emerged as a leading advocate of ecumenical civil rights activism. Previous interpretations asserted that the CME was apolitical and accomodationist or that it was more progressive than it was. Sommerville presents a more nuanced account of how a church of largely former slaves emancipated itself from the constraints of white Methodist paternalism and Jim Crow racism to emerge as a progressive force of racial justice and ecumenism in the South and beyond. Sommerville examines major centers of the CME -- Nashville, Birmingham, Memphis, Atlanta -- and selected leaders inthe South in charting the gradual metamorphosis of the former CME as a largely nonpolitical body of former slaves in 1870 to a more politically active denomination at the apex of the modern Civil Rights movement in the 1960s.

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