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African Methodist Episcopal Church.
The AMEC grew out of the Free African Society (FAS) which
Richard Allen, Absalom Jones, and others established in
Philadelphia in 1787. When officials at St. George’s MEC pulled
blacks off their knees while praying, FAS members discovered just
how far American Methodists would go to enforce racial
discrimination against African Americans. Hence, these members of
St. George’s made plans to transform their mutual aid society into
an African congregation. Although most wanted to affiliate with the
Protestant Episcopal Church, Allen led a
small
group who resolved to remain Methodists. In 1794 Bethel AME was
dedicated with Allen as pastor. To establish Bethel’s independence
from interfering white Methodists, Allen, a former Delaware slave,
successfully sued in the Pennsylvania courts in 1807 and 1815 for
the right of his congregation to exist as an independent
institution. Because black Methodists in other middle Atlantic
communities encountered racism and desired religious autonomy, Allen
called them to meet in Philadelphia to form a new Wesleyan
denomination, the AME.
The
geographical spread of the AMEC prior to the Civil War was mainly
restricted to the Northeast and Midwest. Major congregations were
established in Philadelphia, New York, Boston, Pittsburgh,
Baltimore, Washington, DC, Cincinnati, Chicago, Detroit, and other
large Blacksmith's Shop cities. Numerous northern communities also
gained a substantial AME presence. Remarkably, the slave states of
Maryland, Kentucky, Missouri, Louisiana, and, for a few years, South
Carolina, became additional locations for AME congregations.
The
denomination reached the Pacific Coast in the early 1850’s with
churches in Mother Bethel Church Stockton, Sacramento, San
Francisco, and other places in California. Moreover, Bishop Morris
Brown established the Canada Annual Conference.
The most significant era of denominational
development occurred during the Civil War and Reconstruction.
Oftentimes, with the permission of Union army officials AME clergy
moved into the states of the collapsing Confederacy to pull newly
freed slaves into their denomination. “I Seek My Brethren,” the
title of an often repeated sermon that Theophilus G. Steward
preached in South Carolina, became a clarion call to evangelize
fellow blacks in Georgia, Florida, Alabama, Texas, and many other
parts of the south. Hence, in 1880 AME membership reached 400,000
because of its rapid spread below the Mason-Dixon line . When Bishop
Henry M. Turner pushed African Methodism across the Atlantic into
Liberia and Sierra Leone in 1891 and into South Africa in 1896, the
AME now laid claim to adherents on two continents.
While the AME is doctrinally Methodist, clergy,
scholars, and lay persons have written important works which
demonstrate the distinctive theology and praxis which have defined
this Wesleyan body. Bishop Benjamin W. Arnett, in an address to the
1893 World’s Parliament of Religions, reminded the audience of the
presence of blacks in the formation of Christianity. Bishop Benjamin
T. Tanner wrote in 1895 in The Color of Solomon – What? that
biblical scholars wrongly portrayed the son of David as a white man.
In the post civil rights era theologians James H. Cone, Cecil W.
Cone, and Jacqueline Grant who came out of the AME tradition
critiqued Euro-centric Christianity and African American churches
for their shortcomings in fully impacting the plight of those
oppressed by racism, sexism, and economic disadvantage.
In the 1990s, the AME included over 2,000,000
members, 8000 ministers, and 7000 congregations in more than 30
nations in North and South America , Africa , and Europe . Twenty
bishops and 12 general officers comprised the leadership of the
denomination.

Dennis C. Dickerson
Executive Director of
Research & Scholarship
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