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Christian History, Spring 1999
As far as it
can reckoned, George Liele came into this world the same year
(1751) as James Madison, future member of the Continental
Congress and fourth president of the United States. When
Madison was fighting to have the Bill of Rights become part of
the Constitution, he did not have George Liele in mind. Yet
during the Revolutionary era, black men like George Liele were
also striving to secure their own freedoms, both political and
spiritual. Liele's life gives a glimpse into this lesser-known
struggle in American history.
Free to
preach Of George Liele's
early years we know little. But neither did he: "I was born in
Virginia; my father's name was Liele, and my mother's name
Nancy; I cannot ascertain much of them, as I went to several
parts of America when young, and at length resided in New
Georgia…. I cannot justly tell what is my age, as I have no
account of the time of my birth."
We do know that for the first 22 or so years
of his life, Liele belonged to Henry Sharp, a Baptist deacon
in Burke County, Georgia. In that remarkable period of Baptist
egalitarianism (sparked by the evangelical awakening of the
mid-1700s), interracial fellowships of the twice-born sprouted
in the southern colonies.
At the Baptist church both he and his master
attended, a sermon convinced him he "was not in the way to
heaven but in the way to hell." Liele confessed Christ near
the end of 1773 and went up and down the Savannah River
preaching the Good News. At Silver Bluff, South Carolina, he
planted the seeds of one of the earliest independent
African-American congregations, known as Galphin's
Mill.
Recognizing Liele's ministerial gifts, Sharp,
a British Loyalist, manumitted him shortly before the
Revolutionary War. (In fact, many blacks supported the British
precisely because slavery had already been abolished in the
British Isles and many British held emancipationist
views).
Liele's church also acknowledged his
preaching among slaves. "The white brethren seeing my
endeavors, and that the word of the Lord seemed to be blessed,
gave me a call at a quarterly meeting to preach before the
congregation." They licensed and ordained Liele as a
"probationer."
In the war, Sharp enlisted as a Tory officer
and died "by a ball which shot off his hand." His heirs sought
to re-enslave Liele and had him jailed for a time. He produced
papers showing he was a free man, but to extricate himself,
Liele had to borrow money from a British colonel named
Kirkland, to whom he became indentured. When the British
evacuated Savannah in 1782, Kirkland and Liele made their way
to Jamaica.
Liele worked off his debt, received a
certificate of freedom, and within two years began to preach
in a small house in Kingston. A "good smart congregation," it
was organized with four other blacks who had come from
America. The congregation eventually purchased property in the
east end of Kingston and constructed a brick meeting
house.
Liele reported to English Baptists that
raising money for the new building was especially difficult in
his circumstances. "The chief part of our congregation are
slaves, and their owners allow them, in common, but three or
four bits per week for allowance to feed themselves," he
wrote. "And out of so small a sum we cannot expect anything
that can be of service from them."
The free people who belonged to Liele's
church were generally poor, but "they are all willing, both
free and slaves, to do what they can." Liele himself farmed
and hauled goods with his horses and wagon. He lamented that
the businesses kept him "too much entangled with the affairs
of the world," but felt it also set a good example.
Improving
conditions Despite initial
opposition from some whites, Liele's congregation grew to
about 350 members by 1790 and 500 by 1802, including a few
whites. Liele accepted Methodists after they had been baptized
by immersion but did not receive slaves without "a few lines
from their owners of their good behavior toward them and
religion."
Nevertheless, as he had in the Savannah area,
Liele prized the freedom to preach the gospel and reached
those yet under the yoke of slavery. He asked for help to
obtain a larger bell—one that could be heard two miles away,
for the steeple of the Baptist meeting house. The reason, he
said, was "to give notice to our people and more particularly
to the owners of slaves that are in our society, that they may
know the hour on which we meet, and be satisfied that our
servants return in due time."
Next Liele helped organize other
congregations, and he promoted free schools for slaves and for
free black Jamaicans. On his ministerial burdens, Liele wrote
in the early 1790s:
"I have deacons and elders, a few; and
teachers of small congregations in the town and country, where
convenience suits them to come together; and I am pastor…. I
preach, baptize, administer the Lord's Supper, and travel from
one place to another to publish the gospel and settle church
affairs, all freely."
By the end of the decade, Liele had reason to
be more pessimistic. White persecution was rising: one man
rode his horse all the way into the church and demanded,
"Come, old Liele, give my horse the Sacrament!" Liele stared
down the intruder and replied, "No, sir, you are not fit
yourself to receive it."
Charged with "seditious preaching," he was
thrown into prison in 1797. The original charge was dismissed,
but his inability to satisfy debts incurred in the building of
his church kept him incarcerated for three years.
Despite growing persecution, crowds
overflowed Liele's church, some standing outdoors during
worship to hear him preach. When pressed into service during a
British call to arms, Liele found it more and more difficult
to meet the spiritual needs of "the poor Ethiopian Baptists of
Jamaica." Yet the the Baptist presence in Jamaica continued to
expand, growing to more than 20,000 within five years of
Liele's death.
Meanwhile, his early work in the American
South continued to bear fruit. David George, who had helped
Liele found the Silver Bluff church, also found ministry
outside the U.S. more fruitful; he became a minister in Nova
Scotia and Sierra Leone. Andrew Bryan, one of Silver Bluff's
early converts, cared for the church after Liele removed to
Jamaica, later founded the First African Baptist Church, one
of the earliest independent black churches in the
South.
George Liele died in 1828, eight years before
James Madison. This son of Africa had discovered in
Christianity a freedom superior to the temporal liberty
begrudgingly given and ever subject to constraint. Liele was
the Lord's free man.
When yet in distress over the state of his
unconverted self under the preaching of the Rev. Mr. Matthew
Moore, Liele "requested of my Lord and Master to give me a
work, I did not care how mean it was, only to try and see how
good I would do it." If history be the judge, Liele's work was
good. Today we remember him as the first regularly ordained
African American Baptist minister and as the founder of the
Baptist tradition in Jamaica.
Milton C. Sernett is a professor in the
department of African-American studies at Syracuse University.
He is also the editor of Afro-American Religious History: A
Documentary Witness (Duke, 1985).
Resources: Milton
Sernett's Afro-American
Religious History: A Documentary Witness is the best
collection of primary source material on the subject. He
argues it "does not constitute a history of Afro-American
religion," but merely serves to enable readers "to think about
Afro-American religious history." It certainly does that.
Sernett tells us a new, expanded edition will be out in the
fall of 1999.
Sernett's Black
Religion and American Evangelicalism: White Protestants,
Plantation Missions and the Flowering of Negro Christianity,
1787-1865, is now out of print. But booksellers like
Amazon.com can probably still track down a used copy of this
important work.
For more on black Baptists, including Liele, see A
History of Black Baptists by Leroy Fitts.
Links: PBS Online's Africans in America is
by far the best online resource about African Americans before
the Civil War. It includes articles about Liele
and the First
African Baptist Church of Savannah.
First African Baptist Church of Savannah has its own
website, appropriately named http://www.oldestblackchurch.org/.
The
North Star: A Journal of African-American Religious
History, an academic journal sponsored by Columbia
University's Barnard College, also provides information on
events, new publications, research collections, and other
resources in the field of African-American religious history.
Image: When George
Liele left America with the British, one of his converts, a
slave named Andrew Bryan, continued his work in Savannah,
Georgia. Bryan was ordained in 1788, soon purchased his
freedom, and raised enough money by 1794 to erect Bryan Street
African Baptist Church, the first black Baptist church in
America (and, some argue, the first independent black church
in America, period). Image from the Library of Congress. Used
by permission.
Copyright © 1999 by the author or Christianity Today
International/Christian History Magazine. For reprint
information call 630-260-6200 or e-mail cheditor@christianhistory.net.
Spring 1999, Vol.XVIII, No. 2, Page 32
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