(RNS) — The Rev. Cecelia Williams Bryant, an African Methodist Episcopal Church bishop’s wife known for mentoring up-and-coming clergy and fostering prayer, died on Thursday (Sept. 26), her family announced.
Bryant, 77, was the episcopal supervisor for the AME districts that her husband, now-retired Bishop John R. Bryant, oversaw. She also was the mother of the Rev. Jamal Bryant, pastor of New Birth Missionary Baptist Church, a predominantly Black megachurch outside Atlanta, and the Rev. Thema Bryant, a Pepperdine University professor and former president of the American Psychological Association.
“We were blessed to share life with this anointed and dedicated wife, mother, grandmother and liberated global citizen,” Jamal Bryant said in a statement. “Of all her immense talents and gifts, Rev. C was a powerful and committed intercessor on behalf of the poor and vulnerable. I am not the person I am today without her prayers and love, which have been my north star throughout my life.”
Cecelia Bryant co-founded the AME Church in India with her husband of 55 years and helped to found the AME Church in Cote d’Ivoire, according to The Christian Recorder, the denomination’s official publication. A missionary, author and feminist, she was focused on health, peace and ecological issues and started primary schools in the United States and Africa.
She “was a commanding disciple who stood deep and strong in her faith and family, while remaining deeply dedicated to the cause of salvation,” said Rep. Kweisi Mfume, D-Md., in a statement on the social platform X. “As an advocate for community healing and mental health awareness, she committed her whole life to spreading the Word of God as a liberating and anointed force to everyone she met.”
She lived in Baltimore, where she and her husband once served at Bethel AME Church for more than a dozen years, and was known for her support of women and as a model for ministers, men and women who eventually led churches individually or together as co-pastors.
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“Rev ‘Cee’, as we called her, was our spiritual mom,” said the Rev. Suzan Johnson Cook in a statement. Cook is a former U.S. ambassador-at-large for international religious freedom and was the first Black woman pastor of Mariners’ Temple Baptist Church in New York.
“For those of us who were women entering the ministry in the 1980’s, there were no female role models — except Rev. Cee. She came and installed me at my first church: Mariners’ Temple, brought me in to preach, let me accompany her on Missionary journeys to Guyana, and showed me how to build Christian Women’s ministries and conferences.”
Cook said about 40 people who were influenced by Cecelia Bryant went on to be senior pastors. She recalled singing in the 1970s in the New Temple Singers choir at the Bryants’ Cambridge, Massachusetts, church with couples such as the Rev. Floyd and Elaine Flake, who later co-pastored Greater AME Cathedral in New York City, and the Revs. Grainger and Jo Ann Browning, who jointly lead Ebenezer AME Church in Fort Washington, Maryland.
“John and Cecelia Bryant were always public partners in ministry,” said the Rev. Cheryl Townsend Gilkes, professor emerita at Colby College who now teaches at Hartford International University for Religion and Peace. “They were the model for these couples, especially in the AME Church, but also throughout the larger Black church.”
In her final sermon at New Birth, which was reposted on Jamal Bryant’s Facebook page the day after his mother’s death, Cecelia Bryant joined her husband as they preached together on “The Power of a Praying Church.” She suggested acting on the biblical words in the Apostle Paul’s letter to the Colossians that say “Devote yourself to prayer,” and she gave the congregation directions.
“Point to yourself and repeat after me: Devote yourself to prayer,” she said, as the people in the pews obeyed. “Lay hands on your head and repeat after me: Devote yourself to prayer. Then point to heaven and say: Devote yourself to prayer. Amen.”
She later added: “Our call is not to these denominations that we love so much but our call is to become the praying people of God.”
Gilkes said Cecelia Bryant made a point of bringing women together for conferences, such as one at Princeton Theological Seminary for Black women in ministry that was organized by Renita Weems and Prathia Hall, then PTS doctoral students, in 1983.
“She was like the mother hen that had brought this group of women who became significant leaders and still are significant leaders,” Cook said.
The Rev. John Thomas III, editor of The Christian Recorder, said Cecelia Bryant’s emphasis on prayer included her desire for it to be understood in the languages of the countries where she served in ministry.
“On several occasions, she asked me to help translate prayer calls, and once, I was her interpreter for a sermon in the Dominican Republic at an AME meeting,” he said in an email to RNS about his translations of her English prayers into Spanish. “She was formidable and pushed people to understand how the Holy Spirit moved within them.”