Charles Harrison Mason
Charles Harrison Mason organized and for many decades led
the largest black Pentecostal denomination in the United States, the Church of God in Christ (COGIC), now based in Memphis, Tennessee. Born to parents who had been slaves, Mason grew up
intending to be a minister. “It seemed that God endowed him with supernatural
characteristics,” his daughter wrote, “which were manifested in dreams and
visions that followed him through life.” Mason’s parents moved to Plumersville, Arkansas, in 1878, where Mason was saved and called to preach.
Mason forsook his mission until he was stricken with tuberculosis. He saw his
healing as a miraculous reprieve and divine message to pursue his spiritual
duty. Mason attended Arkansas Baptist College briefly in the early 1890s but left school after a
few months, declaring that God showed him “there was no salvation in schools
and colleges.” Mason received his preaching license in 1893 from a Baptist
congregation. Four years later Mississippi Baptists ordered him to vacate his
pulpit for the offense of preaching holiness doctrines, especially the doctrine
known as “sanctification.” Seeking to find a place for his own church, he
received permission to use an abandoned gin house for a revival in 1897; this
was the origins of what became the Church of God in Christ.
In
the early 1900s Mason walked from town to town in the Mississippi Delta,
spreading the holiness teachings. Yet he was not satisfied with the second
blessing of sanctification. Like other early Pentecostals, he sought a yet more
profound spiritual experience. He found it at the Azusa street revival in Los Angeles, where he received the final holy spirit baptism and
spoke in tongues. During a night of prayer, Mason saw a vision. “When I opened
my mouth to say glory,” he later remembered, “a flame touched my tongue which
ran down in me. My language changed and no word could I speak in my own tongue.”
After Mason’s return from Los Angeles,
he split with his holiness compatriots. Legal tussles ensued, resulting in
Mason’s establishing the Church of God in Christ (COGIC, now a Pentecostal organization) in Memphis. Early Pentecostals recognized Mason’s special powers
of discernment; they saw him as supernaturally gifted. Criticized for importing
conjure into the churches, the COGIC founder pointed to the scriptures
indicating that Jesus taught the same kinds of healings and spirit possessions
that Mason himself also preached. Mason’s preaching skill garnered considerable
attention. As he proudly recounted his early career, the Holy Spirit through
him “saved, sanctified and baptized thousands of souls of all colors and
races.”
Over the next two decades, Mason traveled and preached
tirelessly throughout the entire Mississippi Delta region. With the migration
of African Americans to the North, COGIC increasingly established a presence in
Chicago, Detroit,
and other cities as well. Mason’s church, originating from his early preaching
work in Mississippi, became well known for its spirited singing,
accompanied by tambourines, trumpets, and instruments of all sorts, and by the
kinds of “shouts” and emotional ecstatic release that had been driven out of
many of the more respectable black Baptist and Methodist churches. Mason
reigned over the Church of God
in Christ until his death in 1961.
Paul Harvey
Ithiel C. Clemons, Bishop C. H. Mason and the Roots of the
Church of God in Christ (1996); History
and Formative Years of the Church of God in Christ With Excerpts from the Life
and Works of Its Founder – Bishop C. H. Mason (1969); Karen Lynell Kossie,
“The Move Is On: African American Pentecostal-Charismatics in the Southwest”
(Ph.D. diss., Rice University, 1998); E. W. Mason, The Man . . . . Charles Harrison Mason (1979); Elsie Mason, From the Beginning of Bishop C. H. Mason and
the Early Pioneers of the Church of God in Christ (1991); Mary Mason, The History and Life Work of Bishop C. H.
Mason (1924); Cheryl Sanders, Saints
in Exile: The Holiness Pentecostal Experience in African American Religion and
Culture (1996).