Kincraft : the making of black evangelical sociality

Author(s)

    • Thomas, Todne

Bibliographic Information

Kincraft : the making of black evangelical sociality

Todne Thomas

(Religious cultures of African and African diaspora people / series editors, Jacob K. Olupona, Dianne M. Stewart, Terrence L. Johnson)

Duke University Press, 2021

  • : hardcover

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Note

Includes bibliographical references (p. [229]-245) and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

In Kincraft Todne Thomas explores the internal dynamics of community life among black evangelicals, who are often overshadowed by white evangelicals and the common equation of the “Black Church” with an Afro-Protestant mainline. Drawing on fieldwork in an Afro-Caribbean and African American church association in Atlanta, Thomas locates black evangelicals at the center of their own religious story, presenting their determined spiritual relatedness as a form of insurgency. She outlines how church members cocreate themselves as spiritual kin through what she calls kincraft—the construction of one another as brothers and sisters in Christ. Kincraft, which Thomas traces back to the diasporic histories and migration experiences of church members, reflects black evangelicals' understanding of Christian familial connection as transcending racial, ethnic, and denominational boundaries in ways that go beyond the patriarchal nuclear family. Church members also use their spiritual relationships to navigate racial and ethnic discrimination within the majority-white evangelical movement. By charting kincraft's functions and significance, Thomas demonstrates the ways in which black evangelical social life is more varied and multidimensional than standard narratives of evangelicalism would otherwise suggest.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments  ix Introduction  1 Part One. Contextualizing the Social Dimensions of a Black Evangelical Religious Movement 1. On "Godly Family" and "Family Roots": Creating Kinship Worlds  29 2. Moving against the Grain: The Evangelism of T. Michael Flowers in the Segregated US South  57 3. Black like Me? Or Christian like Me? Black Evangelicals, Ethnicity, and Church Family  83 Part Two. Scenes of Black Evangelical Spiritual Kinship in Practice 4. Bible Study, Fraternalism, and the Making of Interpretive Community  109 5. Churchwomen and the Incorporation of Church and Home  135 6. Black Evangelicals, "the Family," and Confessional Intimacy  167 Conclusion  199 Notes  213 Bibliography  229 Index  247

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