Founder Richard Allen and his wife and the histtory of Mother Bethel AME Church are commemorated in this mural recently completed in the church building. |
Current Senior Pastor Mark Kelly Tyler. |
Note:
A version of this was first posted
on this blog in 2010. It has been greatly expanded with corrections in this 2012 post
with the much appreciated input from the Rev.
Mark Kelly Tyler, Ph.D., 52nd Pastor
of Mother Bethel.
On March 28, 1796 the Bethel Methodist Episcopal Church
opened in Philadelphia. It was
the first American church organized by and for African Americans.
In 1787 Richard Allen and other free
blacks were worshiping at the
city’s St. George Church.
After angry parishioners literally dragged praying blacks from their knees,
a small group withdrew determined to
found their own congregation where
they could worship safely and without
interference.
Allen had been born a slave to a wealthy Quaker
family in 1716. As a child he was sold with a brother to another Quaker, Stokely Sturgis. He was well
treated by the family and encouraged
to read and write. At the age of 17 he received permission to worship
at the Methodist Episcopal Church.
Impressed that the young man’s work
habits were not, as the prevailing
opinion of the time would have it, ruined
by Christianity, Sturgis allowed
Allen to invite the charismatic Methodist preacher Freeborn Garretson onto his property
to preach to his slaves. The master
was so impressed, he converted to Methodism
himself.
Garretson, like many other
Methodists, believed slavery was wrong
and convinced Sturgis to allow Allen to
buy his freedom. Working on
his own time in addition to his service to the Quaker family, Allen saved
up $2000 dollars in devalued Continental currency and bought
his freedom.
By 1783 the new freeman was touring Pennsylvania and neighboring Delaware
counties as an informal missionary
preacher. In 1784 Allen attended the Christmas Conference at which American Methodists formally separated themselves from the Anglican Church.
Richard Allen's confidant and associate Absalom Jones became the country's first Black Episcopal priest, founder of the first Black Anglican parrish and is now venerated by the church. |
He joined St. George’s in
Philadelphia in1786 and was was licensed
to preach, and allowed to organize
early morning prayer services for other free blacks. As the group of
worshipers grew, so did the discomfort
among white members. Black members were to be segregated in a newly built
balcony. Shortly after its completion,
Allen, his regular confidant and
supporter Absalom Jones, and
other Blacks knelt to pray at Sunday services on the main floor as had been their custom when white members insisted that they vacate for the
balcony and began physically dragging Jones to his feet. After prayers
Allen and Jones and their supporters left
promising never to return. After
the 1787 scuffle the free blacks determined to find a location for their own
church.
They raised money for a lot on Sixth
Street near Lombard the same
year and purchased it in Allen’s
name. Universalist Dr. Benjamin Rush, the
founder of the first American
abolitionist society, was among the first
and most generous of Donors. Even President George Washington, probably at the urging of Rush, a friend
and signer of the Declaration of Independence, made a
contribution. The property was the first
real estate owned by blacks in the United
States.
A ramshackle former blacksmith shop was purchased and movedd m to the lof that had been purchased. Richard Allen himself did much if the work to remodel it into a meeting house. |
A former blacksmith shop was purchased and hauled by oxen to the lot. Members went to work repairing and improving the structure.
The congregation however split about affiliation. A group
led by Jones preferred to join the Episcopal
Church. Allen steadfastly believed that the simplicity of Methodist worship was more suitable for Blacks. The parting
was largely amicable. Jones went on to become the country’s first Black ordained Episcopal Priest
and founded St. Thomas Parish.
Patriot, physician, founder of American psychatryite beefac, Univiversalist, and philanthropist was an important White ally and benefactor to Richard Allen and Bethel Church. |
Both infant congregations began the slow
process of raising funds for permanent
church buildings. The devastating Yellow Fever epidemic of 1793
suspended those efforts. Both Allen and Jones worked heroically at the side of Dr. Rush nursing the critically ill and dying. When an account
of the emergency was published neglecting
to mention either man or the services
of their communities, they wrote a pamphlet
which forced a revision in the
account. The pamphlet was the first
thing copyrighted by Blacks in this country.
The converted blacksmith shop was consecrated as a church by sympathetic
Methodist Bishop Francis Ausbury and
named Bethel on this date in
1796. Although licensed to preach Allan was not ordained until 1799 when he was made a Deacon, becoming the first Black man ordained as a Methodist in the
United States.
But even as the church grew to more
than 450 members early in the 19th
Century, most Sunday services were still
conducted by white ministers from St. George’s. Over time the
relations between the two churches grew
strained and St. George’s even tried to seize the keys and force the
deed into the hands of the Methodist Episcopal Church name. On at
least one occasion angry parishioners
jammed the church aisles to prevent a
white minister from taking the pulpit.
In 1816 Allen and other Black
Preachers from Pennsylvania Delaware, Maryland,
and New Jersey met to form a new denomination, the African Methodist Episcopal Church. Allen
was elected Bishop. The sympathetic
and supportive Bishop Ausbury returned for his consecration.
The new denomination spread under
Allen’s guidance and was for many years the largest black religious body. Allen and his friend Jones continued to collaborate for the
benefit to the Black community, most famously banding together to protest the establishment of the American
Colonization Society (ACS) in
1817. Backed by many white
liberals, the ACS sought to raise
money to “repatriate” Blacks to Africa,
a place totally alien to the American born.
Allen died on March 26, 1831 almost exactly 35 years to the day of the
consecration of the blacksmith shop church. By then Bethel was in a fine new building which could seat hundreds. Allen was entombed there. Over time, two
more church buildings were erected at the same original site, but Allen’s tomb,
including members of his family, remains on the property.
In Philadelphia Allen’s church is
known as Mother Bethel. The current handsome stone building was dedicated in 1889 and underwent a
restoration in 1991. You can see it for yourself. The current
address is 419 Richard Allen Ave.
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