In America, the legacy of contradiction between Christian ideals and the reality of institutional slavery, and anti-black racism creates spiritual-racial identity dissonance for African-American Christians. For black Christian men facing the current global health crisis of assault on black personhood, understanding the complexities of spiritual-racial identity is crucial to the holistic health and well-being of African-American Christians. I investigate the embodied, historic friction between American-Christianity and Black identity. How do black men of faith embody, navigate, develop, maintain, and face challenges to their spiritual-racial identity? To answer this question I conducted life histories and focus groups with the black Christian men who participated in the Ghana 360 Challenge (G360). G360 exists to educate, empower and equip college-aged, African-American men spiritually, culturally, and professionally through a 5-week leadership experience in Ghana. Given that the African-American church has been the supplier of many civil rights activists, the study of the lived experience of African-American Christians is integral in continuing to intentionally center and empower black communities and other historical and systematically marginalized communities, especially now when the value of black lives are being contested at every level of the American criminal justice system. Findings include spiritual-racial transformation, transcending orgins, and emphasizing indigenous analysis methods. This research offers tools of hope, resistance, and faith in the midst of spiritual and racial upheaval. By strengthening my own embodied ontological foundation as researcher and creating co-created work that uplifts the voices of my participants as a spiritual, intellectual, and political community, I reinterpret widely circulating stories of black men as prophets as opposed to criminals. Ultimately, this research will contribute to local, and global liberation by exploring the axiology of brokenness as a resistance framework that helps reframe liberational politics as occurring in new sites, or old sites that have been ignored or misrepresented.