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Carter G. Woodson s classic text on the emergence of African American churches, chronicling their story out of the eighteenth-century evangelical revivals and their transformations through the nineteenth and early twentieth century, is important for reasons other than black church history. With the exception of recent books, such as C. Eric Lincoln and Lawrence H. Mamiya s The Black Church in the African-American Experience, Woodson s text remains one of the best overviews of the topic. But Woodson s text is also a significant account of the ways in which Christian-based instruction and socialization shaped not only class divisions and vetted leadership among, but also shaped who/what became the Negro/Colored/Black/African American. For even the Father of Black History, as Woodson is often called, could not escape the spell casted by the prevailing Christian ideology of his time, and in the earlier periods he investigated. In fact, Woodson viewed Christianity [as] a rather difficult religion for [the