“Church” in Black and White: The Organizational Lives of Young Adults

Journal Title: Religions - Year 2016, Vol 7, Issue 7

Abstract

The religious lives of young adults have generally been investigated by examining what young people believe and their self-reported religious practices. Far less is known about young adults’ organizational involvement and its impact on religious identities and ideas about religious commitment. Using data from site visit observations of religious congregations and organizations, and individual and focus group interviews with college-age black and white Christians, we find differences in how black and white students talk about their religious involvement; and with how they are incorporated into the lives of their congregations. White students tended to offer “organizational biographies” chronicling the contours of belonging as well as disengagement, and emphasizing the importance of fulfilling personal needs as a criterion for maintaining involvement. On the other hand, black students used “family” and “home” language and metaphors to describe how their religious involvement, a voluntary choice, was tied to a sense of “calling” and community. We show that this variation is aligned with organizational differences in black and white congregations that situate white youth as separate and black youth as integrated into the larger church community.

Authors and Affiliations

Rhys H. Williams, Courtney Ann Irby and R. Stephen Warner

Keywords

Related Articles

Protection of Religious Signs under Trademark Law: A Perspective of China’s Practice

This article looks at how religious signs are increasingly used in trade and how misappropriation can be harmful to the identity and preservation of religious cultures. Research has shown that trademark rules can be us...

William Apess, Pequot Pastor: A Native American Revisioning of Christian Nationalism in the Early Republic

Pequot Native and Methodist Minister William Apess has received growing recognition among historians as a unique voice for Native Americans—and minorities in general—during the early Republic. This essay began by inqui...

Discourses on Religious Violence in Premodern Japan

This article asks what religious violence is and why it is relevant. It questions common assumptions by focusing on how monastic violence unfolded in premodern Japan. It argues that there was nothing that set this part...

Medieval Muslim Cuisine as A Real-Life Foundation for the Meat and Milk Prohibition in Ibn Ezra’s Biblical Commentary

In his biblical commentary, R. Abraham Ibn Ezra (c. 1090–1164) occasionally voices the contention that the language, culture, and life-style of the Muslim world are capable of contributing to our understanding of contemp...

Science’s Big Problem, Reincarnation’s Big Potential, and Buddhists’ Profound Embarrassment

Scientific materialism is the largely unquestioned basis for modern science’s understanding of life. It also holds enormous sway beyond science and thus has increasingly marginalized religious perspectives. Yet it is e...

Download PDF file
  • EP ID EP25585
  • DOI https://doi.org/10.3390/rel7070090
  • Views 338
  • Downloads 6

How To Cite

Rhys H. Williams, Courtney Ann Irby and R. Stephen Warner (2016). “Church” in Black and White: The Organizational Lives of Young Adults. Religions, 7(7), -. https://europub.co.uk./articles/-A-25585