African Methodist Episcopal Zion Church
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African Methodist Episcopal Zion Church, Black Methodist church in the United States, organized in 1821; it adopted its present name in 1848. It developed from a congregation formed by a group of free Blacks who in 1796 left the John Street Methodist Church in New York City because of discrimination. They built their first church (Zion) in 1800 and were served for many years by white ministers of the Methodist Episcopal Church. In 1821 a conference attended by representatives of six Black churches and presided over by a white Methodist minister elected a Black bishop, James Varick.
After the American Civil War the church grew rapidly in the North and the South. Foreign mission programs were established in South America, Africa, and the West Indies.
The church is Methodist in doctrine and church government; a general conference is held every four years. In 2005 the church reported more than 1.2 million members and about 3,200 congregations. Its headquarters are in Charlotte, North Carolina. In 2012 the church and four other Black Methodist churches—the African Methodist Episcopal Church, the African Union Methodist Protestant Church, the Christian Methodist Episcopal Church, and the Union American Methodist Episcopal Church—entered into full communion with each other and with the predominantly white United Methodist Church.