Byย Rev. Dorothy S. Boulware

(WIB) – November is Black Catholic History Month, set aside to acknowledge and celebrate the sacrifices, contributions, and achievements of the three million Black Catholics in the United States
And an instrument of that history-keeping task, theย Black Catholic Messenger, is marking its fifth year of gathering and distributing news of and to the ever-growing body of faith and its supporters.
While Nate Tinner-Williams, cofounder and editor, is not the sole visionary behind the Messenger, he is definitely the engine that solicited writers and supporters to bring it to fruition.
From Rome to the Roots of Black Catholicism
โAs weโve become more of a traditional news operation, the team of writers has grown exponentially and the coverage area has expanded from just being national to also international,โ he says.
โWeโve covered stories in Rome. Weโve covered the deaths of two popes. Weโve grown quite a bit in the last five years, and weโre so excited about whatโs coming in the future.โ
Tinner-Williams says he never imagined writing a story about an American pope.
โIn 2018, I couldnโt even imagine I would be a Catholic, so to imagine Iโd be writing about an American popeย whoโs sort of Black in 2025, is unbelievable, truly. But you know, thatโs how God works.โ
READ MORE: Why Black Catholics Have Hope for Pope Leo XIV
As for the month being set aside, he says, โThis is the 35th year of this commemoration. It was founded in 1990 by the National Black Catholic Clergy Caucus, which, during the time of the Black Catholic Movement, promoted the visibility of Black Catholics throughout history. So they decided to institute this month. They had months commemorating different things in the Catholic Church.โ
The Messenger website lists national and state-by-state events throughout the nation.
โItโs incredible to see all that goes on and the bishops that participate, the different organizations that put together events online and in person. And it just so happens that there are other official commemorations in the Catholic Church that happen in November, like the feast of Saint Martin de Porres and the founding of the Knights of Peter Claver.โ
Documenting the Path to Sainthood
And the Messenger continues to cover the process of sainthood for the prospective African American Catholics.
โThereโs never been an African-American to reach either of the consecutive stages, which is when you can start naming churches after someone, build official shrines, and all that. So weโre still waiting for the first African-American to be beatified or canonized,โ he says.
READ MORE: African American Catholics Seek Saintly Recognition
โI can tell you all their names,โ he says. โYou have Servant of God, Thea Bowman, Servant of God, Julia Greeley, Venerable Pierre Toussaint, Venerable Augustus Tolton, Venerable Henriette DeLille, Venerable Mary Lang, and the latest is Servant of God, Martin Maria de Porres Ward, who was the first African American member of the conventional Franciscans.โ
Tinner-Williams says he likes โto celebrate an eighth as well because thereโs a Black Puerto Rican whoโs on the path to sainthood as well, Venerable Rafael Cordero.โ
As Tinner-Williams easily rattled off the names with precision, he made the distinction between the differing titles.
โThe ones who I mentioned as servants of God, thatโs the first stage. Second stage is venerable. Mary Lang from Baltimore actually just advanced to the second stage recently, within the last year or two, I think. And so getting people from one stage to the next can often take a while,โ he says.
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โBut yeah, there has been movement recently on those causes. Servant of God, Thea Bowmanโs cause was just opened in 2019. And the guy who worked in Brazil, who was from Massachusetts and DC, his cause was opened the year after in 2020.โ
He says some of these causes are actually quite new, even though the person may have died several decades ago, or, in the case of some of the older causes, more than 100 years ago.
A Generation Focused on Social Justice
As for the younger Catholics, the Messenger appeals to them through its podcast, which covers social justice.
โI know the younger people listen to a lot of podcasts. Itโs also in a video format. But I think young people who are still involved in the Catholic Church, especially young Black Catholics, are very much interested in the social justice focus of the church โ Catholic social teaching. Some of those principles often get de-emphasized among the laity and sometimes even among our bishops,โ he says.
โSo if theyโre not going to get it from the leaders, they can find it in certain segments of Catholic media. We hope Black Catholic Messenger is a place where they can find it.โ
