Dante Stewart's Shoutin' in the Fire is a spiritual memoir of leaving the white evangelical church and finding a liberating Black faith. Stewart, a young Black man from Augusta, Georgia, was a rising leader in his predominantly white evangelical church when Donald Trump's campaign exposed the racism of his congregation. Comments in the pews escalated from microaggressions to open hostility toward Black Americans. Stewart and his family, once welcomed, found themselves isolated. This book traces his journey out of that community and into a Black church tradition shaped by the work of James H. Cone, James Baldwin, and Toni Morrison. Stewart writes about rage as a spiritual practice, about the body's memory of violence, and about finding a faith that affirms rather than denies his Blackness. His prose is lyrical and theological, influenced by the sermonic tradition. Shoutin' in the Fire is both critique of white Christian complicity with racism and testimony to a more expansive spiritual possibility. Stewart does not claim to have arrived; the book is about searching rather than finding. Essential reading for anyone interested in race and American Christianity, or in what it takes to leave a community that has shaped you and build something new.