This content was created by Craig Dietrich. The last update was by Will Luers.
The Father Divine ProjectMain Menu"Inside the Kingdom": The Evolution of the Peace Mission"A Greater Picture of ME": The Peace Mission ArchiveSince the late 1930s, Father Divine and his followers oversaw the documentation of the Peace Mission's own history and public pronouncements in a weekly newspaper, with wire and tape recordings, film and photography."I Know You Are God": A Database Documentary by Will LuersAbout The Father Divine ProjectWill Luers2f0376b300f2ff7145f4f5c8f06d3ab51e0c730dLeonard Norman Primianob55769156974a9bf4a4c74973f47ef4191206d21
1media/background-collage.pngmedia/background-collage.png#6910012010-08-27T22:03:18-07:00The Father Divine Project221An American story of race, religion and intentional communal living.image_header2017-12-21T00:07:37-08:00
"...this Holy Marriage was for the purpose of uniting more effectively Heaven and Earth..." -Father Divine (New Day, May 27, 1950, p. 37)
The above 1950 photograph of Father and Mother Divine expresses a unique religious belief system through the vernacular of American wedding photography. Within an iconography of conservative American values and the stylistic codes of wealth, independence and success, the photograph performs a radical act that would have been shocking to most of the public in the 1940s and the 1950s. Marriage between the races was socially taboo and in many states illegal. The photograph "visualizes" the social ideal of racial harmony through the celibate 1946 marriage between Father Divine, a 65 year-old African American man, and Mother Divine, a 21 year-old white Canadian woman.
The religious belief that this photograph depicts, however, is not the interracial union of two human beings, but the marriage of a single human being to her "God."
This is a work-in-progress. The Father Divine Project is the effort of Dr. Leonard Norman Primiano and Will Luers to make public, maintain, and interpret selections from the enormous archive of this still-active, but aging, American religion. The interpretative lenses focuses on the expressive culture of this distinctive religious community as evidenced in the archive's media artifacts. Ethnographic video documentation, as well as scholarly essays, provide both an artful and scholarly context for the movement. This digital archive presents the viewer, both lay and expert, with the opportunity to understand a complex story of race, religion and intentional communal living as experienced by the followers of one of the most unusual, and yet distinctively American, expressions of faith in United States religious history.