Description
The Spiritual churches started in the 1920s as a women’s movement. Men later assumed leadership so as to legitimate the group within the New Orleans religious community and form associations with Spiritual churches somewhere else in the USA.
Unlike earlier researchers, who treated practices in the churches as expressions of black folk traditions, the authors see Spiritual ritual not as in response to magic, but as the way the sacred is acted out within an African-American aesthetic. All over worship, members could also be filled by the Holy Spirit, as in Pentecostal churches, or “entertain” spirits or spirit guides, as in Spiritualism or Voodoo. Prophecy and healing are presented as the markers of this faith, and the Native American figure Black Hawk as a major symbol of empowerment.
Based on extensive interviews with church members, years of participant statement, and careful research in documentary sources, this book achieves rigorous conceptual clarity in a straightforward, engaging style.
The Authors: Claude F. Jacobs holds a Ph.D. in anthropology from Tulane University. He teaches at Oakland University.
Andrew J. Kaslow holds a Ph.D. in anthropology from Columbia University. He’s a consultant to international organizations.