By Rev. Dorothy S. Boulware
Word in Black

Given its rich history, itโ€™s safe to say that New Psalmist Baptist Church is as much a part of  Baltimore as crab cakes, Orioles baseball games and โ€œThe Wire.โ€ 

Bishop Walter S. Thomas Sr. (back) prepares for the installation of his son as pastor with Minister Benny Thomas. (Photo by Belinda Merritt)

Founded in the basement of a house just a few decades after the CIvil War, the church grew from a few dozen souls in the late 1800s to a congregation that at one point reached 7,000 active members. Revs. Martin Luther King and Jesse Jackson have visited; so has Pastor T.D. Jakes, former President Bill Clinton and then-Sen. Barack Obama. It ministers to the poor, the deaf, the homeless and the formerly incarcerated, among others.  

Yet in 125 years of existence, through growth and change, New Psalmist has had just three pastors shepherding its congregation: its founder, Rev. Junius Gray; his successor, Frederick C. Atkins; and its current leader, The Right Rev. Walter Scott Thomas Sr. 

Passing the torch

Recently, however, the church received its fourth leader. After 49 years at the helm, Bishop Thomas stepped down as the churchโ€™s pastor to make way for New Psalmistโ€™s next leader: his son,  Dr. Walter Scott Thomas Jr. 

โ€œIโ€™m excited to see him run against the wind and to accomplish the sight you see when you make that last turn and start heading down the straightway,โ€ he says. 

As one of the nationโ€™s most influential Black churches โ€” and Thomasโ€™ profile as Bishop and Presiding Prelate of The Kingdom Association of Covenant Pastors โ€” the installation ceremony received national attention. 

But Bishop Thomas also knows itโ€™s time to pass the torch. 

โ€œThe last thing I wanted for New Psalmist was for them to be left with a vision of me dying in the pulpit,โ€ he joked, acknowledging itโ€™s not an unusual occurrence. โ€œWe often see a church in transition because someone has died or even left the church, and thereโ€™s no time for the new leader to glean from the previous leader.โ€

First Lady Jarrette L. Thomas (left) stands proudly with her husband, Dr. Walter S Thomas Jr., who is only the fourth man in the history of New Psalmist Baptist Church to serve as pastor. (Photo by Belinda Merritt)

A lifetime of preparation

Fortunately for him, Dr. Thomas has had a lifetime of preparation to fill his fatherโ€™s enormous shoes, even though he found the idea daunting in the beginning. 

โ€œFirst, just the thought that my pastor was retiring โ€” that was a big thing to take in,โ€ he says. Then came the decision whether to leave First Baptist Church of Steelton in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, where heโ€™d been senior pastor since 2014, and move his wife and young children to Baltimore. 

But the young minister said he and Jarrette, his wife of 15 years, prayed continually until they were content with their decision. 

Dr. Thomas grew up in New Psalmist and will now pastor people who have known him his entire life. As with most preacherโ€™s kids, his experience included doing maintenance, cleaning up trash, working with the catering ministry, serving food and cleaning the bathroom. But his call to ministry seemed almost preordained. 

After hearing the call to ministry in 2001, the preacherโ€™s son graduated Cum Laude from Morehouse College, majoring in religious studies with a minor in psychology. He then went on to obtain his masterโ€™s of divinity from Howard University and his doctorate from United Theological Seminary.  All the while, his ties with New Psalmist deepened. 

Members of the congregation look on as Dr. Walter S Thomas Jr. (center) becomes pastor of New Psalmist Baptist Church with his wife, First Lady Jarrette L. Thomas (front, left), kneeling alongside him. (Photo by Belinda Merritt)

The succession process

Dr. Thomas says him being his fatherโ€™s successor wasnโ€™t guaranteed. 

โ€œThe church had to vote and they could have said yes or no,โ€ he says. โ€œIโ€™m grateful that the process was one where the vote happened while my predecessor, my pastor, is still in position, so we can walk this journey together.โ€ 

As for the ceremony itself, it was filled with โ€œpraise and worship, great preaching by the Bishop, as well as much of the traditional pomp and ceremony,โ€ Dr. Thomas says. โ€œWe were trying to streamline the service, but we agreed this was a time to do what was needed and desired, and not worry about the time.โ€

He hopes other churches will follow the succession model theyโ€™re putting into practice, leaning into what a blessing the senior pastor can be to the incoming pastor.

For Bishop Thomas, it was an emotional moment watching his son take the church into the future. But he plans to share the space with Dr. Thomas as the handoff takes place. After that, โ€œIโ€™ll serve with him through the year and then he will be running that race โ€” and Iโ€™m excited to see what that leg will look like.โ€

This article was originally published by Word in Black.