Dim face of Beauty haunting all the
world,
Fair face of Beauty all too fair to see,
Where the lost stars adown the heavens are hurled,
There, there alone for thee
May white peace be.
Beauty, sad face of Beauty, Mystery, Wonder,
What are these dreams to foolish
babbling men
Who cry with little noises ’neath
the thunder
Of Ages ground to sand,
To a little sand.
Fiona MACLEOD.
It was out in the country, far from
home, far from my foster home, on a dark Sunday night.
The road wandered from our rambling log-house up
the stony bed of a creek, past wheat and corn, until
we could hear dimly across the fields a rhythmic cadence
of song, soft, thrilling, powerful, that
swelled and died sorrowfully in our ears. I was
a country schoolteacher then, fresh from the East,
and had never seen a Southern Negro revival.
To be sure, we in Berkshire were not perhaps as stiff
and formal as they in Suffolk of olden time; yet we
were very quiet and subdued, and I know not what would
have happened those clear Sabbath mornings had some
one punctuated the sermon with a wild scream, or interrupted
the long prayer with a loud Amen! And so most
striking to me, as I approached the village and the
little plain church perched aloft, was the air of
intense excitement that possessed that mass of black
folk. A sort of suppressed terror hung in the
air and seemed to seize us, a pythian madness,
a demoniac possession, that lent terrible reality
to song and word. The black and massive form
of the preacher swayed and quivered as the words crowded
to his lips and flew at us in singular eloquence.
The people moaned and fluttered, and then the gaunt-cheeked
brown woman beside me suddenly leaped straight into
the air and shrieked like a lost soul, while round
about came wail and groan and outcry, and a scene
of human passion such as I had never conceived before.
Those who have not thus witnessed
the frenzy of a Negro revival in the untouched backwoods
of the South can but dimly realize the religious feeling
of the slave; as described, such scenes appear grotesque
and funny, but as seen they are awful. Three
things characterized this religion of the slave, the
Preacher, the Music, and the Frenzy. The Preacher
is the most unique personality developed by the Negro
on American soil. A leader, a politician, an
orator, a “boss,” an intriguer, an idealist, all
these he is, and ever, too, the centre of a group
of men, now twenty, now a thousand in number.
The combination of a certain adroitness with deep-seated
earnestness, of tact with consummate ability, gave
him his preeminence, and helps him maintain it.
The type, of course, varies according to time and
place, from the West Indies in the sixteenth century
to New England in the nineteenth, and from the Mississippi
bottoms to cities like New Orleans or New York.
The Music of Negro religion is that
plaintive rhythmic melody, with its touching minor
cadences, which, despite caricature and defilement,
still remains the most original and beautiful expression
of human life and longing yet born on American soil.
Sprung from the African forests, where its counterpart
can still be heard, it was adapted, changed, and intensified
by the tragic soul-life of the slave, until, under
the stress of law and whip, it became the one true
expression of a people’s sorrow, despair, and
hope.
Finally the Frenzy of “Shouting,”
when the Spirit of the Lord passed by, and, seizing
the devotee, made him mad with supernatural joy, was
the last essential of Negro religion and the one more
devoutly believed in than all the rest. It varied
in expression from the silent rapt countenance or
the low murmur and moan to the mad abandon of physical
fervor, the stamping, shrieking, and shouting,
the rushing to and fro and wild waving of arms, the
weeping and laughing, the vision and the trance.
All this is nothing new in the world, but old as religion,
as Delphi and Endor. And so firm a hold did
it have on the Negro, that many generations firmly
believed that without this visible manifestation of
the God there could be no true communion with the
Invisible.
These were the characteristics of
Negro religious life as developed up to the time of
Emancipation. Since under the peculiar circumstances
of the black man’s environment they were the
one expression of his higher life, they are of deep
interest to the student of his development, both socially
and psychologically. Numerous are the attractive
lines of inquiry that here group themselves.
What did slavery mean to the African savage?
What was his attitude toward the World and Life?
What seemed to him good and evil, God
and Devil? Whither went his longings and strivings,
and wherefore were his heart-burnings and disappointments?
Answers to such questions can come only from a study
of Negro religion as a development, through its gradual
changes from the heathenism of the Gold Coast to the
institutional Negro church of Chicago.
Moreover, the religious growth of
millions of men, even though they be slaves, cannot
be without potent influence upon their contemporaries.
The Methodists and Baptists of America owe much of
their condition to the silent but potent influence
of their millions of Negro converts. Especially
is this noticeable in the South, where theology and
religious philosophy are on this account a long way
behind the North, and where the religion of the poor
whites is a plain copy of Negro thought and methods.
The mass of “gospel” hymns which has swept
through American churches and well-nigh ruined our
sense of song consists largely of debased imitations
of Negro melodies made by ears that caught the jingle
but not the music, the body but not the soul, of the
Jubilee songs. It is thus clear that the study
of Negro religion is not only a vital part of the
history of the Negro in America, but no uninteresting
part of American history.
The Negro church of to-day is the
social centre of Negro life in the United States,
and the most characteristic expression of African
character. Take a typical church in a small Virginia
town: it is the “First Baptist” a
roomy brick edifice seating five hundred or more persons,
tastefully finished in Georgia pine, with a carpet,
a small organ, and stained-glass windows. Underneath
is a large assembly room with benches. This
building is the central club-house of a community
of a thousand or more Negroes. Various organizations
meet here, the church proper, the Sunday-school,
two or three insurance societies, women’s societies,
secret societies, and mass meetings of various kinds.
Entertainments, suppers, and lectures are held beside
the five or six regular weekly religious services.
Considerable sums of money are collected and expended
here, employment is found for the idle, strangers
are introduced, news is disseminated and charity distributed.
At the same time this social, intellectual, and economic
centre is a religious centre of great power.
Depravity, Sin, Redemption, Heaven, Hell, and Damnation
are preached twice a Sunday after the crops are laid
by; and few indeed of the community have the hardihood
to withstand conversion. Back of this more formal
religion, the Church often stands as a real conserver
of morals, a strengthener of family life, and the
final authority on what is Good and Right.
Thus one can see in the Negro church
to-day, reproduced in microcosm, all the great world
from which the Negro is cut off by color-prejudice
and social condition. In the great city churches
the same tendency is noticeable and in many respects
emphasized. A great church like the Bethel of
Philadelphia has over eleven hundred members, an edifice
seating fifteen hundred persons and valued at one hundred
thousand dollars, an annual budget of five thousand
dollars, and a government consisting of a pastor with
several assisting local preachers, an executive and
legislative board, financial boards and tax collectors;
general church meetings for making laws; sub-divided
groups led by class leaders, a company of militia,
and twenty-four auxiliary societies. The activity
of a church like this is immense and far-reaching,
and the bishops who preside over these organizations
throughout the land are among the most powerful Negro
rulers in the world.
Such churches are really governments
of men, and consequently a little investigation reveals
the curious fact that, in the South, at least, practically
every American Negro is a church member. Some,
to be sure, are not regularly enrolled, and a few
do not habitually attend services; but, practically,
a proscribed people must have a social centre, and
that centre for this people is the Negro church.
The census of 1890 showed nearly twenty-four thousand
Negro churches in the country, with a total enrolled
membership of over two and a half millions, or ten
actual church members to every twenty-eight persons,
and in some Southern States one in every two persons.
Besides these there is the large number who, while
not enrolled as members, attend and take part in many
of the activities of the church. There is an
organized Negro church for every sixty black families
in the nation, and in some States for every forty
families, owning, on an average, a thousand dollars’
worth of property each, or nearly twenty-six million
dollars in all.
Such, then, is the large development
of the Negro church since Emancipation. The
question now is, What have been the successive steps
of this social history and what are the present tendencies?
First, we must realize that no such institution as
the Negro church could rear itself without definite
historical foundations. These foundations we
can find if we remember that the social history of
the Negro did not start in America. He was brought
from a definite social environment, the
polygamous clan life under the headship of the chief
and the potent influence of the priest. His religion
was nature-worship, with profound belief in invisible
surrounding influences, good and bad, and his worship
was through incantation and sacrifice. The first
rude change in this life was the slave ship and the
West Indian sugar-fields. The plantation organization
replaced the clan and tribe, and the white master
replaced the chief with far greater and more despotic
powers. Forced and long-continued toil became
the rule of life, the old ties of blood relationship
and kinship disappeared, and instead of the family
appeared a new polygamy and polyandry, which, in some
cases, almost reached promiscuity. It was a
terrific social revolution, and yet some traces were
retained of the former group life, and the chief remaining
institution was the Priest or Medicine-man.
He early appeared on the plantation and found his
function as the healer of the sick, the interpreter
of the Unknown, the comforter of the sorrowing, the
supernatural avenger of wrong, and the one who rudely
but picturesquely expressed the longing, disappointment,
and resentment of a stolen and oppressed people.
Thus, as bard, physician, judge, and priest, within
the narrow limits allowed by the slave system, rose
the Negro preacher, and under him the first church
was not at first by any means Christian nor definitely
organized; rather it was an adaptation and mingling
of heathen rites among the members of each plantation,
and roughly designated as Voodooism. Association
with the masters, missionary effort and motives of
expediency gave these rites an early veneer of Christianity,
and after the lapse of many generations the Negro
church became Christian.
Two characteristic things must be
noticed in regard to the church. First, it became
almost entirely Baptist and Methodist in faith; secondly,
as a social institution it antedated by many decades
the monogamic Negro home. From the very circumstances
of its beginning, the church was confined to the plantation,
and consisted primarily of a series of disconnected
units; although, later on, some freedom of movement
was allowed, still this geographical limitation was
always important and was one cause of the spread of
the decentralized and democratic Baptist faith among
the slaves. At the same time, the visible rite
of baptism appealed strongly to their mystic temperament.
To-day the Baptist Church is still largest in membership
among Negroes, and has a million and a half communicants.
Next in popularity came the churches organized in
connection with the white neighboring churches, chiefly
Baptist and Methodist, with a few Episcopalian and
others. The Methodists still form the second
greatest denomination, with nearly a million members.
The faith of these two leading denominations was more
suited to the slave church from the prominence they
gave to religious feeling and fervor. The Negro
membership in other denominations has always been
small and relatively unimportant, although the Episcopalians
and Presbyterians are gaining among the more intelligent
classes to-day, and the Catholic Church is making headway
in certain sections. After Emancipation, and
still earlier in the North, the Negro churches largely
severed such affiliations as they had had with the
white churches, either by choice or by compulsion.
The Baptist churches became independent, but the
Methodists were compelled early to unite for purposes
of episcopal government. This gave rise to the
great African Methodist Church, the greatest Negro
organization in the world, to the Zion Church and
the Colored Methodist, and to the black conferences
and churches in this and other denominations.
The second fact noted, namely, that
the Negro church antedates the Negro home, leads to
an explanation of much that is paradoxical in this
communistic institution and in the morals of its members.
But especially it leads us to regard this institution
as peculiarly the expression of the inner ethical
life of a people in a sense seldom true elsewhere.
Let us turn, then, from the outer physical development
of the church to the more important inner ethical
life of the people who compose it. The Negro
has already been pointed out many times as a religious
animal, a being of that deep emotional nature
which turns instinctively toward the supernatural.
Endowed with a rich tropical imagination and a keen,
delicate appreciation of Nature, the transplanted
African lived in a world animate with gods and devils,
elves and witches; full of strange influences, of
Good to be implored, of Evil to be propitiated.
Slavery, then, was to him the dark triumph of Evil
over him. All the hateful powers of the Under-world
were striving against him, and a spirit of revolt
and revenge filled his heart. He called up all
the resources of heathenism to aid, exorcism
and witch-craft, the mysterious Obi worship with its
barbarious rites, spells, and blood-sacrifice even,
now and then, of human victims. Weird midnight
orgies and mystic conjurations were invoked, the witch-woman
and the voodoo-priest became the centre of Negro group
life, and that vein of vague superstition which characterizes
the unlettered Negro even to-day was deepened and
strengthened.
In spite, however, of such success
as that of the fierce Maroons, the Danish blacks,
and others, the spirit of revolt gradually died away
under the untiring energy and superior strength of
the slave masters. By the middle of the eighteenth
century the black slave had sunk, with hushed murmurs,
to his place at the bottom of a new economic system,
and was unconsciously ripe for a new philosophy of
life. Nothing suited his condition then better
than the doctrines of passive submission embodied
in the newly learned Christianity. Slave masters
early realized this, and cheerfully aided religious
propaganda within certain bounds. The long system
of repression and degradation of the Negro tended
to emphasize the elements of his character which made
him a valuable chattel: courtesy became humility,
moral strength degenerated into submission, and the
exquisite native appreciation of the beautiful became
an infinite capacity for dumb suffering. The
Negro, losing the joy of this world, eagerly seized
upon the offered conceptions of the next; the avenging
Spirit of the Lord enjoining patience in this world,
under sorrow and tribulation until the Great Day when
He should lead His dark children home, this
became his comforting dream. His preacher repeated
the prophecy, and his bards sang,
“Children, we all shall be free
When the Lord shall appear!”
This deep religious fatalism, painted
so beautifully in “Uncle Tom,” came soon
to breed, as all fatalistic faiths will, the sensualist
side by side with the martyr. Under the lax
moral life of the plantation, where marriage was a
farce, laziness a virtue, and property a theft, a
religion of resignation and submission degenerated
easily, in less strenuous minds, into a philosophy
of indulgence and crime. Many of the worst characteristics
of the Negro masses of to-day had their seed in this
period of the slave’s ethical growth. Here
it was that the Home was ruined under the very shadow
of the Church, white and black; here habits of shiftlessness
took root, and sullen hopelessness replaced hopeful
strife.
With the beginning of the abolition
movement and the gradual growth of a class of free
Negroes came a change. We often neglect the influence
of the freedman before the war, because of the paucity
of his numbers and the small weight he had in the
history of the nation. But we must not forget
that his chief influence was internal, was
exerted on the black world; and that there he was
the ethical and social leader. Huddled as he
was in a few centres like Philadelphia, New York, and
New Orleans, the masses of the freedmen sank into
poverty and listlessness; but not all of them.
The free Negro leader early arose and his chief characteristic
was intense earnestness and deep feeling on the slavery
question. Freedom became to him a real thing
and not a dream. His religion became darker
and more intense, and into his ethics crept a note
of revenge, into his songs a day of reckoning close
at hand. The “Coming of the Lord”
swept this side of Death, and came to be a thing to
be hoped for in this day. Through fugitive slaves
and irrepressible discussion this desire for freedom
seized the black millions still in bondage, and became
their one ideal of life. The black bards caught
new notes, and sometimes even dared to sing,
“O Freedom, O Freedom, O Freedom
over me!
Before I’ll be a slave
I’ll be buried in my grave,
And go home to my Lord
And be free.”
For fifty years Negro religion thus
transformed itself and identified itself with the
dream of Abolition, until that which was a radical
fad in the white North and an anarchistic plot in
the white South had become a religion to the black
world. Thus, when Emancipation finally came,
it seemed to the freedman a literal Coming of the Lord.
His fervid imagination was stirred as never before,
by the tramp of armies, the blood and dust of battle,
and the wail and whirl of social upheaval. He
stood dumb and motionless before the whirlwind:
what had he to do with it? Was it not the Lord’s
doing, and marvellous in his eyes? Joyed and
bewildered with what came, he stood awaiting new wonders
till the inevitable Age of Reaction swept over the
nation and brought the crisis of to-day.
It is difficult to explain clearly
the present critical stage of Negro religion.
First, we must remember that living as the blacks
do in close contact with a great modern nation, and
sharing, although imperfectly, the soul-life of that
nation, they must necessarily be affected more or
less directly by all the religious and ethical forces
that are to-day moving the United States. These
questions and movements are, however, overshadowed
and dwarfed by the (to them) all-important question
of their civil, political, and economic status.
They must perpetually discuss the “Negro Problem,” must
live, move, and have their being in it, and interpret
all else in its light or darkness. With this
come, too, peculiar problems of their inner life, of
the status of women, the maintenance of Home, the training
of children, the accumulation of wealth, and the prevention
of crime. All this must mean a time of intense
ethical ferment, of religious heart-searching and
intellectual unrest. From the double life every
American Negro must live, as a Negro and as an American,
as swept on by the current of the nineteenth while
yet struggling in the eddies of the fifteenth century, from
this must arise a painful self-consciousness, an almost
morbid sense of personality and a moral hesitancy which
is fatal to self-confidence. The worlds within
and without the Veil of Color are changing, and changing
rapidly, but not at the same rate, not in the same
way; and this must produce a peculiar wrenching of
the soul, a peculiar sense of doubt and bewilderment.
Such a double life, with double thoughts, double
duties, and double social classes, must give rise
to double words and double ideals, and tempt the mind
to pretence or revolt, to hypocrisy or radicalism.
In some such doubtful words and phrases
can one perhaps most clearly picture the peculiar
ethical paradox that faces the Negro of to-day and
is tingeing and changing his religious life.
Feeling that his rights and his dearest ideals are
being trampled upon, that the public conscience is
ever more deaf to his righteous appeal, and that all
the reactionary forces of prejudice, greed, and revenge
are daily gaining new strength and fresh allies, the
Negro faces no enviable dilemma. Conscious of
his impotence, and pessimistic, he often becomes bitter
and vindictive; and his religion, instead of a worship,
is a complaint and a curse, a wail rather than a hope,
a sneer rather than a faith. On the other hand,
another type of mind, shrewder and keener and more
tortuous too, sees in the very strength of the anti-Negro
movement its patent weaknesses, and with Jesuitic
casuistry is deterred by no ethical considerations
in the endeavor to turn this weakness to the black
man’s strength. Thus we have two great
and hardly reconcilable streams of thought and ethical
strivings; the danger of the one lies in anarchy,
that of the other in hypocrisy. The one type
of Negro stands almost ready to curse God and die,
and the other is too often found a traitor to right
and a coward before force; the one is wedded to ideals
remote, whimsical, perhaps impossible of realization;
the other forgets that life is more than meat and
the body more than raiment. But, after all,
is not this simply the writhing of the age translated
into black, the triumph of the Lie which
today, with its false culture, faces the hideousness
of the anarchist assassin?
To-day the two groups of Negroes,
the one in the North, the other in the South, represent
these divergent ethical tendencies, the first tending
toward radicalism, the other toward hypocritical compromise.
It is no idle regret with which the white South mourns
the loss of the old-time Negro, the frank,
honest, simple old servant who stood for the earlier
religious age of submission and humility. With
all his laziness and lack of many elements of true
manhood, he was at least open-hearted, faithful, and
sincere. To-day he is gone, but who is to blame
for his going? Is it not those very persons who
mourn for him? Is it not the tendency, born of
Reconstruction and Reaction, to found a society on
lawlessness and deception, to tamper with the moral
fibre of a naturally honest and straightforward people
until the whites threaten to become ungovernable tyrants
and the blacks criminals and hypocrites? Deception
is the natural defence of the weak against the strong,
and the South used it for many years against its conquerors;
to-day it must be prepared to see its black proletariat
turn that same two-edged weapon against itself.
And how natural this is! The death of Denmark
Vesey and Nat Turner proved long since to the Negro
the present hopelessness of physical defence.
Political defence is becoming less and less available,
and economic defence is still only partially effective.
But there is a patent defence at hand, the
defence of deception and flattery, of cajoling and
lying. It is the same defence which peasants
of the Middle Age used and which left its stamp on
their character for centuries. To-day the young
Negro of the South who would succeed cannot be frank
and outspoken, honest and self-assertive, but rather
he is daily tempted to be silent and wary, politic
and sly; he must flatter and be pleasant, endure petty
insults with a smile, shut his eyes to wrong; in too
many cases he sees positive personal advantage in
deception and lying. His real thoughts, his real
aspirations, must be guarded in whispers; he must not
criticise, he must not complain. Patience, humility,
and adroitness must, in these growing black youth,
replace impulse, manliness, and courage. With
this sacrifice there is an economic opening, and perhaps
peace and some prosperity. Without this there
is riot, migration, or crime. Nor is this situation
peculiar to the Southern United States, is it not rather
the only method by which undeveloped races have gained
the right to share modern culture? The price
of culture is a Lie.
On the other hand, in the North the
tendency is to emphasize the radicalism of the Negro.
Driven from his birthright in the South by a situation
at which every fibre of his more outspoken and assertive
nature revolts, he finds himself in a land where he
can scarcely earn a decent living amid the harsh competition
and the color discrimination. At the same time,
through schools and periodicals, discussions and lectures,
he is intellectually quickened and awakened.
The soul, long pent up and dwarfed, suddenly expands
in new-found freedom. What wonder that every
tendency is to excess, radical complaint,
radical remedies, bitter denunciation or angry silence.
Some sink, some rise. The criminal and the sensualist
leave the church for the gambling-hell and the brothel,
and fill the slums of Chicago and Baltimore; the better
classes segregate themselves from the group-life of
both white and black, and form an aristocracy, cultured
but pessimistic, whose bitter criticism stings while
it points out no way of escape. They despise
the submission and subserviency of the Southern Negroes,
but offer no other means by which a poor and oppressed
minority can exist side by side with its masters.
Feeling deeply and keenly the tendencies and opportunities
of the age in which they live, their souls are bitter
at the fate which drops the Veil between; and the very
fact that this bitterness is natural and justifiable
only serves to intensify it and make it more maddening.
Between the two extreme types of ethical
attitude which I have thus sought to make clear wavers
the mass of the millions of Negroes, North and South;
and their religious life and activity partake of this
social conflict within their ranks. Their churches
are differentiating, now into groups of
cold, fashionable devotees, in no way distinguishable
from similar white groups save in color of skin; now
into large social and business institutions catering
to the desire for information and amusement of their
members, warily avoiding unpleasant questions both
within and without the black world, and preaching in
effect if not in word: Dum vivimus, vivamus.
But back of this still broods silently
the deep religious feeling of the real Negro heart,
the stirring, unguided might of powerful human souls
who have lost the guiding star of the past and seek
in the great night a new religious ideal. Some
day the Awakening will come, when the pent-up vigor
of ten million souls shall sweep irresistibly toward
the Goal, out of the Valley of the Shadow of Death,
where all that makes life worth living Liberty,
Justice, and Right is marked “For
White People Only.”