ARTICLE
Doing Black Christianity: Reframing Black Church
scholarship
Shaonta' E. Allen
Department of Sociology, University of
Cincinnati
Correspondence
Shaonta' E. Allen, Department of Sociology,
University of Cincinnati, 301 Clifton Ct.
Crosley Tower Rm. #1002, Cincinnati, OH
45221-0378.
Email: allen3se@mail.uc.edu
Abstract
The Black Church is the oldest social institution in the Black
community and has played a significant role in the Black
American experience by offering a space to develop Black
oppositional consciousness. Despite the strong Black Chris-
tian tradition, a comprehensive review of the sociological
literature on Black Christianity has yet to be conducted.
The present article surveys extant literature and finds that
two major frames are utilized when analyzing Black Chris-
tianity: (a) the Institutional-level frame, which focuses on
the Black Church as a social and cultural space, and (b) the
Ideological-level frame, which sees Black Christianity as a
set of racialized attitudes, values, and beliefs. I rely on
Avishai's concept of “Doing Religion” to argue the case for a
new approach in framing this research and propose the use
of an Individual-level frame, which considers the agency of
Black Christian actors by examining how they construct
identity and embody faith. To illustrate the usefulness of
the new frame, I provide an exemplar of Black Christian
activist Bree Newsome Bass, highlighting the ways her faith
informs her activism. By shifting the focus away from the
Black Church as an institution and Black Christianity as an
ideology, and instead centering the mechanisms Black
Christian actors use to incorporate their faith into their
everyday lives, sociological research on Black Christianity
will be better equipped to provide insights into how religion
informs racialized experiences in society.
Received: 1 February 2019 Revised: 3 July 2019 Accepted: 5 July 2019
DOI: 10.1111/soc4.12731
Sociology Compass. 2019;e12731. wileyonlinelibrary.com/journal/soc4 © 2019 John Wiley & Sons Ltd. 1 of 15
https://doi.org/10.1111/soc4.12731