The Colored Man in the Methodist Episcopal Church

audiobook

The Colored Man in the Methodist Episcopal Church

by L. M. (Lewis Marshall) Hagood

EN·~8 hours·20 chapters

Chapters

20 total
1

THE COLORED MAN IN THE Methodist Episcopal Church.

0:12
2

PREFACE.

3:35
3

CONTENTS.

0:49
4

ILLUSTRATIONS.

0:26
5

INTRODUCTION.

16:38
6

CHAPTER I BEFORE THE WAR.

22:29
7

CHAPTER II THE COLOR-LINE SECESSIONS.

42:47
8

CHAPTER III THE CRISIS—ITS CAUSE.

27:35
9

CHAPTER IV THE COLORED PASTORATE.

30:06
10

CHAPTER V THE RETROSPECT.

16:51

Description

This volume offers a careful, documentary look at how the Methodist Episcopal Church has wrestled with the place of African‑American members from the colony’s first enslaved arrivals through the post‑Civil‑War era. It traces the early attraction many Black worshippers felt toward Methodism, the church’s growing anti‑slavery stance, and the internal debates that kept the issue alive long after emancipation. By drawing on conference records, personal testimonies, and contemporary illustrations, the author maps the evolving relationship between the denomination and its colored faithful.

Written from the perspective of a longtime church leader, the work seeks to balance a narrative that has often been told from a single side. Chapters explore the “color‑line” secessions, the wartime challenges, the push for an African‑American bishop, and the broader question of what the church should do for its Black members. The result is a thoughtful, accessible history that invites listeners to understand a complex legacy and consider how past decisions still echo in today’s congregations.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~8 hours (466K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by hekula03, Barry Abrahamsen, and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive)

Release date

2020-02-15

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

LM

L. M. (Lewis Marshall) Hagood

1853–1936

A late-19th-century Methodist writer and minister, remembered for documenting the place of Black Americans in the Methodist Episcopal Church. His best-known work brings together church history, race, and faith in a way that still feels valuable to readers of American religious history.

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