Caesar Blackwell (1769-1845): the Work and Times of Central Alabama's Nineteenth-Century Slave-Evangelist (Biography) Caesar Blackwell (1769-1845): the Work and Times of Central Alabama's Nineteenth-Century Slave-Evangelist (Biography)

Caesar Blackwell (1769-1845): the Work and Times of Central Alabama's Nineteenth-Century Slave-Evangelist (Biography‪)‬

Baptist History and Heritage 2007, Summer-Fall, 42, 3

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Descrizione dell’editore

Caesar Blackwell lived as a slave and died as a slave. No one, however, was as influential within the slave population in central Alabama as Caesar. Although he lived and died in slavery, his ownership changed from John B. Blackwell to the Alabama Baptist Association (ABA). Caesar's early creative attempt at missions was quite impressive. The effectiveness of the slave-evangelist, Caesar, indicated by the surviving references to the high demand for his preaching and related services, is a powerful confirmation to his skill as a communicator. His itinerant ministry was widespread within the association and sometimes beyond. Despite his fame, most historical treatments of Caesar's ministry have been expressed in one or two paragraphs.

GENERE
Storia
PUBBLICATO
2007
22 giugno
LINGUA
EN
Inglese
PAGINE
12
EDITORE
Baptist History and Heritage Society
DIMENSIONE
204,8
KB

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