List of Figures
Acknowledgments
Introduction
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Epilogue
Appendix
Bibliography
About the Author
Jonathan Chism is assistant professor of history at the University of Houston-Downtown.
Conventional historical knowledge of the civil rights period holds
that black Pentecostal churches largely refrained from political
activism. In this well-documented text, Chism (Univ. of
Houston-Downtown) ably refutes that interpretation. Taking the
Church of God in Christ in Memphis, Tennessee, as a case study, he
details the ways churches linked membership among the elect of God
to the secular obligations of citizenship. Chism’s study draws from
printed sources and a few solid oral histories as much as from
primary material to focus on the short Civil Rights Movement
(1954–1968), a story that has been hiding in plain sight. One of
the book's strengths is the author's ability to meld professional
insight with the social insight of being on the inside of the
movement as a church member. In the process, he is able to perceive
the role of women and avoid the trap of concentrating strictly on
the agency of male clergy, while deftly weaving together the
religious and social politics of race in Memphis. This volume is
essential for any academic collection on modern America or the
Civil Rights Movement. Summing Up: Essential. Upper-division
undergraduates through faculty.
*CHOICE*
Wonderfully written and impressively researched, Jonathan Chism's
Saints in the Struggle is a vitally important study of the Church
of God in Christ (COGIC) and its contributions to the fabled Civil
Rights Movement in Memphis and beyond. From charting the genesis of
COGIC as a historic African American Christian denomination to the
galvanizing of divine justice and social justice in the souls of
the grassroots activists, Chism's book reveals the often-overlooked
political dimensions of Pentecostalism as well as the spiritual
roots of the Memphis civil rights struggle. Any scholar or student
yearning to more fully understand the historic contours of race,
religion, region, and social activism in the 20th century should
read this remarkable book.
*Juan M. Floyd-Thomas, associate professor of African American
religious history, Vanderbilt University*
'When the saints go marching in...' is an old hymn with sights set
on heaven, but Saints in the Struggle suggests the refrain can be
sung amid this-worldly endeavors in the polis as well. Jonathan
Chism tells of Church of God in Christ saints working to mobilize
the black electorate, to support the NAACP, and to unionize and
strike for better wages and more just working conditions. This book
shows that shifting our perspective from Azusa Street, Los Angeles,
to Mason Street, Memphis, opens up another window into Pentecostal
witness not at the ends of the earth but at the center of America,
one in which the struggle for holiness drove saints into the
streets, voting booths, and city council halls in their quest for
civil rights and mission for justice.
*Amos Yong, Professor of Theology and Mission, Fuller Theological
Seminary*
Saints in the Struggle by Jonathan Langston Chism brings to light
the heretofore unrecognized role played by notable leaders of COGIC
in the Memphis Sanitation Workers Strike of 1968. With meticulous
archival research and groundbreaking photographic evidence, the
author proves that G.E. Patterson Sr., J.O. Patterson, and C.W.
Porter acted as key players in the mobilization of the strategic
coalition of diverse black pastors and congregations that succeeded
in gaining better working conditions for the Memphis sanitation
workers. Dr. Chism persuasively argues that the grass roots level
of strike and boycott was larger than that played by national civil
rights luminaries and can serve as a model for local grassroots
activism today.
*Eric N. Newberg, Oral Roberts University*
Saints in the Struggle fills a major gap in Civil Rights and Black
Church studies by focusing on black Pentecostal civil rights
activists in Memphis, Tennessee, especially Bishops J. O.
Patterson, Sr. and G. E. Patterson. In this well-researched and
nuanced book, Jonathan Chism spotlights voting rights and economic
justice rather than the bus and school integration. By placing
black Pentecostal activists at the center of his analysis, he
offers a fresh perspective on this critical Civil Rights era.
*David D. Daniels, Henry Winters Luce Professor of World
Christianity, McCormick Theological Seminary*
In this thoughtful, well-written exploration, Jonathan Chism shows
us how the Saints of the Church of God In Christ navigated the
dynamic tension between the imperative of Sanctification and the
demands of social justice. Saints in the Struggle is a much-needed
addition to our ongoing discussions about faith, protest and the
pursuit of God’s Will.
*Charles McKinney, Rhodes College*
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