This unique edited collection scours the files of the Journal of the Lutheran Historical Conference to assemble a wide array of scholarship on Black Lutheran history in what would become the United States. Fourteen articles spanning 50 years, from 1974 to 2024, offer episodic insights that combine to establish the range and variety of the Black experience in the United States from the colonial era to the 20st century.
Co-editors Denise L. Rector and Mark Granquist offer rich introductions that contextualize both history and historiography, asking readers to "discern the archive" (Rector) with insightful notes on language, approach, and what's missing as well as what's present in the collection. Contributors' chapters cover diverse subjects using an array of approaches ranging from chronology to biography, uncovering a pan-Lutheran story of opportunity and restriction, remarkable achievements and regrettable decisions. Rector's epilogue provides a cogent challenge for both historians and readers as we continue the complicated work of seeking to truly do justice, love mercy, and walk humbly. Scholars, ministry leaders, and interested Lutherans from across the contemporary denominational spectrum will benefit from the wisdom uncovered in both the chapters themselves and the co-editors' valuable contributions.