I thoroughly enjoy and grow from global conversations. When it comes to Black Americans, something gets lost. There is a thought that Black American Christians were weakened by faith. I would challenge that. History doesn’t always agree.
Christian faith did more than create a church tradition.
It helped cultivate inner freedom before outer freedom was possible.
When people were surrounded by systems designed to break their dignity, the faith that took root in Black communities did something powerful:
- It taught people they were created in the image of God — not property.
- It insisted their souls had value when the world denied their humanity.
- It offered a future larger than the present moment.
- It trained the imagination to see beyond chains, poverty, segregation, and humiliation.
That spiritual framework became a survival technology of the soul.
It allowed people to say:
My current condition is not the final word over my life.
You can see this in the spirituals that were sung in the fields and churches:
“There is a balm in Gilead.”
“Swing low, sweet chariot.”
“Soon I will be done with the troubles of the world.”
Even the songs were not passive resignation. There was strength and hope. Possibility. Certainty.
The story of Black Americans has largely been made possible on the foundation of faith, specifically Christianity.
