Influential Black Religious Studies Scholars

Influential Black Religious Studies Scholars

Our list of influential Black religious studies scholars is comprised of leaders in the field who are developing ideas in areas such as activism, political theology, poverty, racial reconciliation, and more. They are paving the way for the next generation of religious studies scholars.

Top 10 Black Religious Scholars from the Last 30 Years

  1. James H. Cone
  2. Warith Deen Mohammed
  3. Roderick L. Evans
  4. Barry Black
  5. Jacquelyn Grant
  6. Prathia Hall
  7. C. T. Vivian
  8. Katie Cannon
  9. M. Shawn Copeland
  10. Jamie T. Phelps

Religion seeks to connect people to that which is ultimately real, sacred, and of ultimate value. According to the American Academy of Religion, religious scholars in the field of Religious Studies inquire into how these religions develop their ideas and how those ideas relate to our lives in the world. Religious faith continues to play a vital role in the Black community. According to the Pew Reasearch Center, 79% of Black Americans identify as religious. This devotion carries over into Black academic studies of religion.

Historically, liberation and freedom from oppression have been the main topics within Black religious scholarship. Prominent theologian James H. Cone (1938–2018) is seen as the founder of Black Liberation Theology, which argues that God identifies with the marginalized and oppressed.seen as the founder of Black Liberation Theology, which argues that God identifies with the marginalized and oppressed. According to Theos:

God in Black Theology is the active force that overthrows injustice and releases the captives from their oppression. Black theology seeks to promote the significance of Black people within the sacred story of God’s interaction with humankind (i.e., the Bible) and as a means of promoting ideas of reconciliation and living together in unity, in a world that transcends racism.

Contributions by current scholars investigate issues of poverty (West), liberation (Cone, West, Roberts), racial reconciliation (West, Roberts), and black political theology (West, Roberts). Womanist theologians, such as Cheryl A. Kirk-Duggan, have focused on issues of theology and violence from the perspectives of women of color. Religious Studies scholars often seek to connect scholarship and activism, building bridges between the academy, the church, and the larger society.

Influential Black Leaders in Religion

Black scholars of religious studies have found their inspiration in these historical figures:

  • Richard Allen — Founder of the African Methodist Episcopal Church in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, in 1794. The AME was the first independent Black Christian denomination in the United States.
  • Nannie Helen Burroughs — Suffragette, activist, and co-founder of the Women’s Auxiliary of the National Baptist Convention, an early pro-feminism Christian organization.
  • William J. Seymour — Holiness preacher instrumental in the Azusa Street Revival, a seminal event in the Pentecostal and charismatic movements.
  • Wallace Fard Muhammad, Elijah Muhammad, and Malcolm X — Key leaders in the Black Muslim group The Nation of Islam.
  • Martin Luther King Jr. — American Baptist minister, first president of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference, and prominent civil rights leader.
Back to Top

25 Influential Black Religious Studies Scholars From the Last 30 Years

The Black scholars in our list were identified as highly cited and searched people using our machine-powered Influence Ranking algorithm, which produces a numerical score of academic achievements, merits, and citations across Wikipedia/data, Crossref, Semantic Scholar and an ever-growing body of data.

Find out more about our Methodology.

List is arranged alphabetically

  1. Lewis V. Baldwin

    1949 - Present (75 years)
    Lewis V. Baldwin is a historian, author, and professor specializing in the history of the black churches in the United States. He is an acknowledged expert on the Spencer Churches, the oldest black denominationss in the country. He currently teaches at Vanderbilt University.
  2. Barry Black

    1948 - Present (76 years)
    Barry Clayton Black is the 62nd chaplain of the United States Senate. He began serving as Senate chaplain on June 27, 2003, becoming the first African American and first Seventh-day Adventist to hold the office.
  3. Katie Cannon

    1949 - 2018 (69 years)
    Katie Geneva Cannon was an American Christian theologian and ethicist associated with womanist theology and black theology. In 1974 she became the first African-American woman ordained in the United Presbyterian Church .
  4. James E. Cheek

    1932 - 2010 (78 years)
    James Edward Cheek was president emeritus of Howard University. He was born in Roanoke Rapids, North Carolina. Howard University President In 1989, Cheek appointed Republican National Committee Chairman Lee Atwater as a member of the Howard University Board of Trustees. Students rose up in protest against Atwater’s appointment, disrupting Howard’s 122nd anniversary celebrations, and eventually occupied the university’s administration building. Within days, both Atwater and Cheek resigned.
  5. James H. Cone

    1938 - 2018 (80 years)
    James Hal Cone was an American theologian. He is best known for his advocacy of black theology and black liberation theology. His 1969 book Black Theology and Black Power provided a new way to comprehensively define the distinctiveness of theology in the black church. His message was that Black Power, defined as black people asserting the humanity that white supremacy denied, was the gospel in America. Jesus came to liberate the oppressed, advocating the same thing as Black Power. He argued that white American churches preached a gospel based on white supremacy, antithetical to the gospel of ...
  6. M. Shawn Copeland

    1947 - Present (77 years)
    Mary Shawn Copeland , known professionally as M. Shawn Copeland, is a retired American womanist and Black Catholic theologian, and a former religious sister. She is professor emerita of systematic theology at Boston College and is known for her work in theological anthropology, political theology, and African American Catholicism.
  7. Kelly Brown Douglas

    Kelly Delaine Brown Douglas is an African-American Episcopal priest, womanist theologian, and the inaugural Dean of the Episcopal Divinity School at Union Theological Seminary. She is slated to be the interim president of Episcopal Divinity School upon its departure from Union in 2023. She is also the Canon Theologian at the Washington National Cathedral. She has written seven books, including The Black Christ , Black Bodies and Black Church: A Blues Slant , Stand Your Ground: Black Bodies and the Justice of God , and Resurrection Hope: A Future Where Black Lives Matter . Her book Sexuality in...
  8. Michael Eric Dyson

    1958 - Present (66 years)
    Michael Eric Dyson is an American academic, author, ordained minister, and radio host. He is a professor in the College of Arts and Science and in the Divinity School at Vanderbilt University. Described by Michael A. Fletcher as “a Princeton Ph.D. and a child of the streets who takes pains never to separate the two”, Dyson has authored or edited more than twenty books dealing with subjects such as Malcolm X, Martin Luther King Jr., Marvin Gaye, Barack Obama, Nas’s debut album Illmatic, Bill Cosby, Tupac Shakur and Hurricane Katrina.
  9. Leah Gaskin Fitchue

    1940 - 2019 (79 years)
    Leah Gaskin Fitchue , also known as Leah Gaskin White and Leah Gaskin Coles, was an American city official, professor of religious studies and college administrator. She was president of Payne Theological Seminary from 2003 to 2015.
  10. Jacquelyn Grant

    1948 - Present (76 years)
    Jacquelyn Grant is an American theologian, a Methodist minister. Alongside Katie Cannon, Delores S. Williams, and Kelly Brown Douglas, Grant is considered one of the four founders of womanist theology. Womanist theology addresses theology from the viewpoint of Black women, reflecting on both their perspectives and experience in regards to faith and moral standards. Grant is currently the Callaway Professor of Systematic Theology at the Interdenominational Theological Center in Atlanta.
  11. Prathia Hall

    1940 - 2002 (62 years)
    Prathia Laura Ann Hall Wynn was an American leader and activist in the Civil Rights Movement, a womanist theologian, and ethicist. She was the key inspiration for Martin Luther King Jr.’s “I Have a Dream” speech.
  12. Vincent Harding

    1931 - 2014 (83 years)
    Vincent Gordon Harding was an African-American pastor, historian, and scholar of various topics with a focus on American religion and society. A social activist, he was perhaps best known for his work with and writings about Martin Luther King Jr., whom Harding knew personally. Besides having authored numerous books such as There Is A River, Hope and History, and Martin Luther King: The Inconvenient Hero, he served as co-chairperson of the social unity group Veterans of Hope Project and as Professor of Religion and Social Transformation at Iliff School of Theology in Denver, Colorado. When Ha...
  13. Cheryl A. Kirk-Duggan

    1951 - Present (73 years)
    Cheryl A. Kirk-Duggan is an African-American womanist theologian, professor, author, poet, and an elder in the Christian Methodist Episcopal Church. She is Professor-Emerita of Religion and Women’s Studies and Director of Women’s Studies at Shaw University Divinity School. She is the author or editor of numerous books, including the volume Women and Christianity in a series on Women and Religion in the World, published by Praeger.
  14. Warith Deen Mohammed

    1933 - 2008 (75 years)
    Warith Deen Mohammed , also known as W. Deen Mohammed, Imam W. Deen Muhammad and Imam Warith Deen, was an African-American Muslim leader, theologian, philosopher, Muslim revivalist, and Islamic thinker.
  15. Hugh R. Page

    1956 - Present (68 years)
    Hugh Rowland Page Jr. is professor of Africana studies and theology at the University of Notre Dame. He has previously chaired the Africana studies department. He also served as dean of the First Year of Studies, and as vice-president and associate provost for undergraduate affairs. He is a scholar of esotericism in African-American religious experience.
  16. Jamie T. Phelps

    1941 - Present (83 years)
    Jamie Theresa Phelps, O.P. is an American Catholic theologian. Phelps, who is African American, is known for her contributions to womanist theology. Biography Phelps was born in Alabama, the youngest of six children of a Catholic household. She became an Adrian Dominican Sister in 1959.
  17. Anthony B. Pinn

    1964 - Present (60 years)
    Anthony B. Pinn is an American professor working at the intersections of African-American religion, constructive theology, and humanist thought. Pinn is the Agnes Cullen Arnold Professor of Humanities and Professor of Religious Studies at Rice University. He is also the founder and executive director of the Center for Engaged Research and Collaborative Learning in Houston, Texas, and Director of Research for the Institute for Humanist Studies in Washington, D.C.
  18. Albert J. Raboteau

    1943 - 2021 (78 years)
    Albert Jordy “Al” Raboteau II was an American scholar of African and African-American religions. Since 1982, he had been affiliated with Princeton University, where he was Henry W. Putnam Professor of Religion.
  19. J. Deotis Roberts

    1927 - 2022 (95 years)
    James Deotis Roberts was an American theologian, and a pioneering figure in the black theology movement. Biography Born in Spindale, North Carolina, Roberts earned a Bachelor of Arts degree from Johnson C. Smith University, a Bachelor of Divinity degree from Shaw University, and a Master of Sacred Theology degree from Hartford Seminary. In 1957, he became the first African American to earn a PhD from New College, University of Edinburgh, in philosophical theology. Later in 1994, he was awarded an honorary DLitt, also from the University of Edinburgh.
  20. J. Alfred Smith

    1931 - Present (93 years)
    James Alfred Smith Senior is the Pastor Emeritus of the Allen Temple Baptist Church in Oakland, California. Ebony Magazine chose Smith to be one of the “Most Influential Black Americans” and was one of the magazine’s Top 15 Greatest Black Preachers of 1993.
  21. C. T. Vivian

    1924 - 2020 (96 years)
    Cordy Tindell Vivian was an American minister, author, and close friend and lieutenant of Martin Luther King Jr. during the civil rights movement. Vivian resided in Atlanta, Georgia, and founded the C. T. Vivian Leadership Institute, Inc. He was a member of the Alpha Phi Alpha fraternity.
  22. Renita J. Weems

    1954 - Present (70 years)
    Renita J. Weems is an American Protestant biblical scholar, theologian, author and clergywoman. She is the first black woman to earn a Ph.D. in Old Testament studies in this country. She was influenced by the move in the last half of the 20th century which argues that context matters and shapes our scholarship and understanding of truth. She is best known for her significant contribution to womanist theology, feminist studies in religion and black religious thought. She is recognized as one of the first scholars to bring black women’s ways of reading and interpreting the Bible into mainstream...
  23. Cornel West

    1953 - Present (71 years)
  24. Delores S. Williams

    1937 - Present (87 years)
    Delores Seneva Williams was an American Presbyterian theologian and professor notable for her formative role in the development of womanist theology and best known for her book Sisters in the Wilderness: The Challenge of Womanist God-Talk. Her writings use black women’s experiences as epistemological sources, and she is known for her womanist critique of atonement theories. As opposed to feminist theology, predominantly practiced by white women, and black theology, predominantly practiced by black men, Williams argued that black women’s experiences generate critical theological insights and q...

This list is far from exhaustive; if you have a suggestion for someone to add, please contact us.

Back to Top

Key Associations for Black Scholars in Religious Studies

Whether for their general contributions to the field of religious studies or for their particular impact within the Black experience, these organizations play an important role:

  • American Academy of Religion (AAR)fosters excellence in the academic study of religion and enhance the public understanding of religion, with a commitment to promoting academic excellence, professional responsibility, free inquiry, critical examination, diversity, inclusion, respect, and transparency in the study of religion.
  • Black Religious Scholars Group(BRSG) — is committed to creating dialogues that forge bonds of communication for partnership and innovation between Black peoples. At the core of its vision is “the conviction that dialogue and collaboration among scholars, churches, and community activist organizations is essential for cultivating transformative debates and promoting social justice.”
  • Society for the Scientific Study of Religion (SSSR)fosters interdisciplinary dialogue and collaboration among more than a thousand scholars from sociology, religious studies, psychology, political science, economics, international studies, gender studies, and many other fields.
  • American Association of Blacks in Higher Education (AABHE)strives to be the premier organization to drive leadership development, access and vital issues concerning Blacks in higher education. In pursuing this vision, AABHE seeks to collaborate with other ethnic groups and organizations that have similar interests.

For more the most famous Black scholars of the last 30 years, visit our Influential Black Scholars page. If you want more on Religious Studies, visit our Religious Studies page to find more influential Religious Studies Scholars, top colleges and universities for Religious Studies, and more.

Other Influential Black Scholars by Academic Discipline

Featured Image Credits Include:

Do you have a question about this topic? Ask it here