'Race', Black Majority Churches, and the Rise of Ecumenical Multiculturalism in the 1970s

20 Century Br Hist. 2019 Dec 1;30(4):531-556. doi: 10.1093/tcbh/hwz016.

Abstract

At the beginning of the 1970s, relations between the historic British churches and the new black-led churches were usually non-existent or marked by prejudices or ambivalences. This article examines the emergence, development, and significance of a cross-cultural ecumenical dialogue sponsored by the British Council of Churches. It places this in a context of both growing white liberal interest in the 'multi-racial' society and the increasing public assertiveness of collective black Christian consciousness. In doing so, it contributes to our understandings of religious change in the twentieth century: both in terms of perceptions of 'secularization' and the complex relationship between Christianity and race relations in the decades after Windrush.