Is the Black Church Dead?: Religious Resilience and the Contemporary Functions of Black Christianity

Author:

Allen Shaonta’ E.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Sociology, Dartmouth College, Hanover, NH 03755, USA

Abstract

Recent sociological literature draws attention to the changes in religious affiliation and expression among younger generations. More specifically, extant research suggests that the increase in religious “nones” (those who no longer identify with a religion) and “dones” (those who no longer affiliate with a religious congregation) substantiates the secularization thesis which contends that religion is becoming increasingly insignificant in modern society. However, when these trends are disaggregated across racial lines, religious affiliation remains high among Black Millennials. The present study explores this anomaly further, drawing on data from in-depth interviews with 65 Black Christian Millennials to assess how, if at all, the historic functions of the Black Church are still prevalent among Black Christians today. Findings suggest that while some functions have remained constant across generations (i.e., social–cultural), others have evolved (i.e., socio-political and socio-educational) or become defunct (i.e., socio-economic) and new functions have emerged (i.e., socio-emotional). As such, I introduce the concept religious resilience as a framework for understanding how and why a religion’s “afterlife” is sustained despite macro-level processes that might undermine its prominence. Altogether, this study has implications for how we conceptualize racialized religion and how we measure, operationalize, and understand religious expression across social locations.

Funder

University of Cincinnati Department of Sociology’s Kunz Center for Social Research Graduate Student Research Support Award

University of Cincinnati Taft Research Center’s Graduate Research Enhancement Grant and COVID-19 Rapid Response Award

P.E.O. International Sisterhood’s Dissertation Scholars Award

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Religious studies

Reference88 articles.

1. Allen, Reniqua (2019a). It Was All a Dream: A New Generation Confronts the Broken Promise to Black America, Nation Books.

2. Are Millennials Really an Entitled Generation?;Allen;An Investigation into Generational Equity Sensitivity Differences. Journal of Business Diversity,2015

3. Doing Black Christianity: Reframing Black Church Scholarship;Allen;Sociology Compass,2019b

4. The Case of Black Millennials;Allen;Sociological Perspectives,2020

5. Finding Religion in Everyday Life;Ammerman;Sociology of Religion,2014

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