Bishop ch mason biography

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Mason also conducted integrated funerals, baptisms, and worship services.  Mason had both hermeneutical and cultural suspicions of the methods, philosophy, and curriculum set forth at the college.  There are small congregations, consisting of just a few members - and large ones made up of several thousand members, like West Angeles Church Of God In Christ, characterized as a multi-cultural church with more than 15,000 members. 

 

Bishop Charles Harrison Mason encouraged interracial cooperation, like West Angeles Church, as early as the 1900's.

The son of devout Baptist Missionary parents, he experienced a dramatic conversion in 1880 when “the glory of God came down upon him,” restoring his health.

Believing and teaching that believers should seek “the God of the Bible,” Bishop Mason founded the Church Of God In Christ in 1897.  In a surprising turn of events on the first Sunday in September 1880, he was miraculously healed. 

 

Along with his mother he attended the Mt.

Olive Baptist Church near Plumerville where the pastor, Mason's half-brother, the Reverend I.S. Nelson, baptized him in an atmosphere of praise and thankgiving. Mason

Our Founder

Bishop Charles Harrison Mason was the founder and first senior bishop of the Church of God in Christ (COGIC), presently the largest African-American Pentecostal church in the United States.

Born to former slaves Jerry and Eliza Mason in Shelby County, Tenn., on Sept.

 Mason refused to marry as long as Mrs. Alice Saxton-Mason lived.

 

Mason's determination to get an education was a crucial turning point after his divorce.  Mason was jailed at Lexington, Mississippi, for allegedly preaching against the war, although he sold bonds to help the war efforts.  They became very close friends.

However, Boss Crump did not stop Mason from holding integrated meetings.  This recognition allowed clergy to perform marriages, to carry out other ministerial functions having legal consequences, and thus entitling them to certain economic advantages such as the right to obtain reduced clergy rates on railroads. From 1907 to 1914, Mason ordained hundreds of white ministers.

 Mason, Jones, and their colleagues were vehemently opposed and eventually expelled from Baptist churches via the National Baptist Convention. 

 

Mason, while walking along a street in Little Rock, Arkansas, received the revelation of the name, Church Of God In Christ (COGIC) (1 Thess 2:14; 2 Thess 1:1). When he died, COGIC claimed one million members.

He allowed the working classes to shout, dance, testify about their daily struggles, speak in tongues, use musical instruments, and sing gospel music.

bishop ch mason biography

In the 1930s, Edward Hull “Boss” Crump told Mason he could not continue to allow blacks and whites to sit together. Additionally, Fifth Street was renamed Mason Street in 1953, and Mason received the Pittsburgh Currier award for contributing to racial equality in America.

Mason died in Detroit on November 17, 1961.

Before Mason’s death, he earned a doctorate of divinity from Trinity Hall College in 1957. In December 1954, seven months after the landmark Brown v.