ISBN:9781570754722
Pages: 232
Binding: Softcover
Forged in the Fiery Furnace
By: Diana L. Hayes
Overview
"A fine introduction to its topic and provides a broad overview of its development in both Protestant and Catholic traditions."--The Mennonite
Todays vibrant African American spiritual traditions have their roots in the lives of Africans who arrived as slaves in North America, bringing with them the richness and texture of their cultures and faith. In the words of Dr. Hayes, "The world view, traditions, stories, musicality, and religious beliefs of their African ancestors were preserved . . . built upon, syncretized with new understandings and ideas, and passed down from generation to generation, mother to son, father to daughter."
In eight chapters, Hayes describes the origins of African American spirituality, developments during slavery, the Civil War and Reconstruction, the periods of Jim Crow and the Civil Rights Movement; the manifestations of this spirituality in music and in the Black churches; the particular contributions of Black women; and the spirituality of key Black leaders.
Diana L. Hayes, professor emerita of systematic theology at Georgetown University, is a popular lecturer and the author of several books, including Trouble Don't Always Last: Soul Prayers (Liturgical, 1995), Were You There? Stations of the Cross (Orbis, 1999) and Standing in the Shoes My Mother Made (Fortress, 2010). She is also co-editor of Taking Down Our Harps: Black Catholics in the United States (Orbis, 1998). She lives in Stone Mountain, Georgia.