ABSTRACT
The history of resistance to black racial oppression in the US dates back at least to slavery. From abolition to the Civil Rights Movement, the Black Panther party, and the BlackLivesMatter Movement, each of these oppositions to racial injustice has been much discussed in the literature, but less often discussed is the role that Pentecostalism played in shaping black struggle for racial justice. This paper attempts to bridge this gap by showing how Pentecostalism in the US emerged as perhaps the first organised black protestant movement of the post bellum years. It traces its roots to African culture and argues that Pentecostalism embodied the positive ontology of black cultural expressionism and empowerment, which laid the foundation for the resistance movements that came later. This is the ontology of the spirit and performance from which blackness drew its resilience and resistance to racial oppression.
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Correction Statement
This article has been corrected with minor changes. These changes do not impact the academic content of the article.
Notes
1. Vinson Synan was speaking in a Documentary titled The Azusa Street Revival of 1906 YouTube.
2. There is a useful of this discussion by Randal J. Stephen in Assessing the Black Roots of Pentecostalism: are.as.wvu.edu/pentroot.htm.