In this Book

Divine Callings: Understanding the Call to Ministry in Black Pentecostalism

Book
Richard N. Pitt
2012
Published by: NYU Press
summary

One of the unique aspects of the religious profession is the high percentage of those who claim to be “called by God” to do their work. This call is particularly important within African American Christian traditions. Divine Callings offers a rare sociological examination of this markedly understudied phenomenon within black ministry.

Richard N. Pitt draws on over 100 in-depth interviews with Black Pentecostal ministers in the Church of God in Christ—both those ordained and licensed and those aspiring—to examine how these men and women experience and pursue “the call.” Viewing divine calling as much as a social process as it is a spiritual one, Pitt delves into the personal stories of these individuals to explore their work as active agents in the process of fulfilling their calling.

In some cases, those called cannot find pastoral work due to gender discrimination, lack of clergy positions, and educational deficiencies. Pitt looks specifically at how those who have not obtained clergy positions understand their call, exploring the influences of psychological experience, the congregational acceptance of their call, and their response to the training process. He emphasizes how those called reconceptualize clericalism in terms of who can be called, how that call has to be certified, and what those called are meant to do, offering insight into how social actors adjust to structural constraints.

Table of Contents

Cover

Title Page, Copyright Page

Contents

Acknowledgments

pp. ix-xi

Part I. Introduction

Introduction

pp. 3-16

1. The Church of God in Christ: Pentecostal History, Doctrine, and Polity

pp. 17-38

Part II. Becoming the Called

2. “Heard a Voice from Heaven Say”: Calling Narratives among Black Pentecostals

pp. 41-71

3. “All the World’s a Stage”: How Congregations Create the Called

pp. 72-103

Part III. Being the Called

4. “A Stutter And A Stick”: The (Non-) Value of Educational Credentialing

pp. 107-148

5. “Don’t Quit Your Day Job”: Redefining Religious Work

pp. 149-181

6. “Chew the Meat and Spit Out the Bones”: Negotiating Women’s Clerical Identity

pp. 182-210

Part IV. Conclusion

7. Legitimating New Understandings of Ministry and the Clergy

pp. 213-228

Appendix

pp. 229-234

Notes

pp. 235-245

References

pp. 247-257

Index

pp. 259-264

About the Author

pp. 265
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