This story was originally published as part of the Washington Association of Black Journalists (WABJ) 2026 Urban Journalism Workshop and lightly edited for style and clarity.

Black faith leaders in the Washington, D.C. metropolitan area are mobilizing congregations ahead of upcoming local and congressional elections in an effort to turn faith into action and boost civic engagement.

โ€œThe role of faith is to hold the state accountable,โ€ said the Rev. Dr. Cassandra Gould. โ€œWhen policies do more harm than good, we have a responsibility to help people build the power to change those conditions.โ€

More than six decades after the passage of the Voting Rights Act of 1965 and days after the U.S. Supreme Court weakened key protections in the landmark law, Black faith leaders said itโ€™s important to step up.

As battles over voting rights and election access unfold across the country and in Congress, they said they are adapting their efforts to meet the challenges posed by the political climate.

โ€œThe Black church is extremely active, even while itโ€™s in a season of transition,โ€ said Tony Lee, pastor of Community of Hope Church and social justice chair of the AME Second Episcopal District.

He added that for โ€œevery generation, the role evolves because the struggle evolves.โ€

โ€œWe are sitting in a time period in which weโ€™re fighting against Trump and white supremacy as it has re-emerged,โ€ Lee said.

The pastor pointed to what he described as a surge in attacks on marginalized communities following the election of Barack Obama, the nationโ€™s first Black president, arguing that progress has been met with backlash.

To counter that backlash, Lee and other Black church leaders across the region are organizing mayoral debates, voter registration drives, poll chaplain programs and protests.

Community of Hope in Temple Hills, Maryland, is partnering with faith organizations to deploy poll chaplains who help ensure voters feel safe. It is one of the churchโ€™s efforts to support civic engagement.

โ€œWe have a very robust mobilizing and organizing strategy centered around voter registration, voter empowerment and voter education,โ€ said Lee, who has also gone to nontraditional spaces like go-go clubs to urge crowds to vote.

At Metropolitan AME Church, an intergenerational Faith Action Committee was created to help the congregation become a โ€œ100% voting congregation.โ€ The effort focuses on voter education, registration and turnout through workshops, candidate forums and community listening sessions.

โ€œOur goal essentially was โ€ฆ ensuring every eligible voter within our congregation is registered and ready to vote,โ€ said Joy Masha, co-lead of the Faith Action Committee.

The Rev. William H. Lamar IV, pastor of Metropolitan AME Church, a historically Black church in downtown D.C., said, โ€œchurches are inherently political.โ€

โ€œWhat one says about God and believes about the Creator shapes what one does in the world,โ€ Lamar said.

Faith Leaders Face Challenges Mobilizing Communities

Faith leaders said they face many obstacles in trying to get people to be politically active.

By mobilizing underprivileged communities, leaders are challenging โ€œinstitutions that are shaped to tear down our folks and tear down their hope,โ€ said Lee.

**FILE** The Rev. William H. Lamar IV, pastor of Metropolitan AME Church, emphasizes the importance of churches being politically active in order to empower community members, particularly during challenging social times. (Robert R. Roberts/The Washington Informer)

โ€œWe want people to live faithfully,โ€ he explained, โ€œbut theyโ€™re living in hopeless situations.โ€

There are two types of organizing, according to Lamar: โ€œOrganized people vs. Organized Money.โ€

โ€œWhen people have more money, you must outorganize them,โ€™โ€™ he said. โ€œThatโ€™s what was done in abolition movements, civil rights, the womenโ€™s rights and gay rights movements.โ€

Lamar said itโ€™s crucial to build relationships of power within communities.

โ€œThe demonstration of peopleโ€™s power is a sacrifice we must make together,โ€ he said, while also remaining gentle โ€œwith the realities of human existence.โ€

The Historical Political Role of the Black Church

Throughout history, Black churches have always been a site for โ€œBlack-centered political action and imagination,โ€ said Jason Williams, associate professor of Social Justice Studies at Montclair University.

โ€œThe Black church has long been a center of both spiritual life and civic education,โ€ according to Williams.

For example, early denominations like the African Methodist Episcopal Church (AME Church), founded by Richard Allen, were created in response to racism and quickly became spaces for organizing.

During slavery and legalized segregation, it was one of the few spaces where Black people could gather freely, share ideas and support one another, said Williams. He said it was a haven for enslaved Africans.

That role became more prominent during the Civil Rights Movement when leaders like the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. turned to churches to help organize protests and push for equal rights. But while some Black churches have been centers for advocacy, liberation, and progress, it is important not to hold a โ€œromantic viewโ€ that every Black church was active, said Lamar.

โ€œEither your church or religious institution has a politics of sustaining and strengthening the status quo or it has a politics of overturning the status quo in the interest of human beings,โ€ he said.

Lee said Black churches continue to be a trusted space โ€œwhere hope is embodied through community engagements and social justice.โ€

Williams agreed. โ€œReligion and politics inevitably overlap because faith often shapes peopleโ€™s values and values tend to shape public life,โ€ he said.

Black religious leaders believe the churchโ€™s role is to unite people and guide them toward collective action.

โ€œPolitics is a way to figure out how resources are disseminated,โ€ said Lee, adding that faith and policy are deeply connected. โ€œThe church has to be the moral compass of the nation, working to steer society toward policies that care for the marginalized and the downtrodden.โ€

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