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Mobile Ed: CS251 History and Theology of the African American Church (7 hour course - audio)

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$69.99

Overview

Carl Ellis is uniquely qualified to teach about Christianity in an African-American context and his depth of experience makes him an ideal guide for relating how theology developed over time within the African-American church. For thousands of years, God has mightily used many Africans to advance his kingdom. In this course, Ellis delves into Scripture, church history, and describes important movements like African-American missions during the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, the civil-rights movement, and analyzes important events happening today.

Study a rich heritage of culturally and ethnically African models of faith for modern believers. This course draws on Old Testament examples, like Ebed-Melech from Jeremiah chapter 38, New Testament Christians like Simon the Cyrene, initial African believers in Acts chapter two, and the church in Antioch where Paul based his ministry. Furthermore, many of the early Church Fathers, like Augustine, were themselves African. Viewers will better understand parallels between initial Greek Christians and modern day African-American Christians in, two populations that Ellis refers to as similarly sub-dominant.

As application, Ellis advocates for a modern-day reformation among African-American Christians instead of revival, citing the present need for a radical reassessment and revitalization of modern faith. Reframing the concept of righteousness into a covenantal setting, he emphasizes relationship between God and the individual Christian. The task of modern believers is to display the gospel by emphasizing social justice and social Godliness, personal justice, and personal Godliness in all aspects of life. The Bible has much to say about social justice and this course equips Christians to recognize societal, systemic examples of injustice and to address them via a God-honoring model for the African-American church. African-American believers should readily express their faith beyond merely personal Godliness, bringing to bear ethical and relational values of God's kingdom in every modern setting.

This is the audio only version of CS251 History and Theology of the African American Church . To purchase the full course, click here.

Resource Experts

Course Outline

Unit 1: From Africa to America

  • Africans in Scripture and Early Church History
  • The African Church under Slavery
  • The Early American Experience
  • Theological Development among African Americans
  • Life Concerns
  • Southern Antebellum African-American Theology
  • Resistance to Oppression
  • Characteristics of Resistance
  • The Slaves and Christianity-ism
  • Central Themes in the African-American Experience

Unit 2: Phases of African-American Church Development

  • The Peanut Gallery Phase
  • The Soul Dynamic
  • The Plantation Phase
  • Slave Revolts
  • The Indigenous Phase
  • Indigenous African-American Churches
  • African-American Denominations
  • More African-American Churches

Unit 3: Black Missions

  • Theological and Missional Developments
  • Divine Significance
  • Black Missionaries Not from America
  • America’s First Missionary
  • Nineteenth Century African-American Missionaries
  • African-American Theologians of the Antebellum North
  • More African-American Theologians of the Antebellum North
  • More African-American Theologians of the Antebellum North
  • Christianity, Commerce, and Civilization

Unit 4: Before and After the Civil War

  • Events Leading up to the Civil War
  • More Events Leading up to the Civil War
  • The African-American Church after the Civil War
  • African-American Church Growth
  • Economic Development in the African-American Church
  • The End of Reconstruction in the South
  • The Industrial Revolution in the North
  • The Consolidation of Colonialism in Africa
  • The Marginalization and Expulsion of Black Missionaries
  • Effects of the Three Great Traumas on the African-American Church
  • Attempts to Fill the Theological Vacuum
  • The White Church at the End of the Nineteenth Century

Unit 5: The Twentieth Century

  • Approaches to Theology
  • The Window of Theology
  • The Roots of Pentecostalism
  • The Development of Pentecostalism
  • The Diminishing Prophetic Voice of the African-American Church
  • Two Great African-American Migrations
  • Challenges that Arose from the Great Migrations
  • The Urban Church
  • The Separational and Sociological Church Models
  • The Associational Church Model
  • Precursors to Non-Traditional Church Models
  • Non-Traditional Church Models

Unit 6: The Civil Rights Movement

  • The Struggle for Civil Rights
  • The Montgomery Bus Boycott
  • What Made the Civil Rights Movement Effective
  • The Peak of the Civil Rights Movement
  • A Dysfunctional Bible-Believing Church
  • Civil Rights and the Gospel

Unit 7: African-American Cults

  • Christian Cults
  • The Black Jews
  • The Moorish Temple of Science
  • The Temple of Islam
  • The Nation of Islam

Unit 8: Current Challenges and New Models

  • Today’s African-American Cultural Crisis: The Great Migration
  • Today’s African-American Cultural Crisis: An Exodus and a Meltdown
  • Disconnected Generations
  • Developing an Authentic African-American Theology
  • Opportunities for Ministry
  • The Dominion Church Model
  • Discipleship
  • Kinship Compassion
  • What a Reformation Would Look Like

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Carl F. Ellis Jr.

Dr. Carl Ellis is the assistant professor of practical theology at Redeemer Seminary in Dallas, Texas, and the associate pastor for cultural apologetics at New City Fellowship.

In 1969, Dr. Carl Ellis began his ministry as a senior campus minister with the Tom Skinner Associates in New York. From 1979 to 1989, Dr. Ellis served as the assistant pastor of Forest Park Community Church in Baltimore, Maryland, served on the faculty at Chesapeake Theological Seminary, and as seminary instructor for Prison Fellowship, where he developed and taught “in-prison” and “in-community” seminars for inmates and community volunteers.

Between 1986 and 2009, Dr. Ellis served as an adjunct faculty member at the Center for Urban Theological Studies (CUTS), and as dean of intercultural studies at Westminster Theological Seminary in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.

Dr. Ellis studied under Francis Schaeffer at L’Abri in Hermoz sur Ollon, Switzerland, completed his Masters in Theology at Westminster Theological Seminary, and holds a DPhil from Oxford Graduate School.

 

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  1. Angela Meister
    I completed the Mobile Ed course. Highly recommend.

$69.99