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Overview: Religion and the U.S. American South
Charles Reagan Wilson, University of Mississippi
Essay Sections:
Beginnings to 1830:
Attention to the historical development of religion in
the South underscores the dramatic changes the region has undergone and
ways in which religion has entered into the ideology and experience
of southerners. Anglicanism, an American version of the English national
religion, was the first dominant religious tradition in the South, but
dissenting Protestant sects, Catholics, and Jews were also present in
the southern colonies. Virginia was especially significant as the home
to Anglicanism, becoming the established church early on. Maryland,
in
its origins, represented an early version of southern religious pluralism,
established as a potential refuge for Roman Catholics but also attracting
Puritans,
Quakers,
and Anglicans.
After the Glorious
Revolution in England in the 1680s, Maryland adopted Anglicanism
as the state church of the colony, as did the Carolina colonies and
eventually
the rest of the southern colonies as well. Lay influence made
for a distinctive
southern Anglicanism, compared to the Church of England. Without
a bishop
in the colonies and with the predominant secular, materialistic values
of a plantation society, the Anglican church was institutionally
and culturally
weak, but its presence did provide some degree
of a cultural unity across
the colonies, with ministers holding the main religious worship services
in the
South region through the
early 1700s, teaching a common theology and moral values, and operating
schools. A distinctive group of French Protestants
in South
Carolina, the Hueguenots,
mostly joined the Anglican church there, recognizing the importance
of
its cultural role.
Anglicanism left its stamp on the later culture of the South through
its embodiment of an influential social model. Anglican ministers had
respected social and political authority and allied themselves with
the gentry, and upper-class southerners would long admire the Anglican
embrace of social class differences, along with paternalistic responsibilities
and benevolence.—which historian C.
Vann Woodward called a Southern
Ethic. When the Anglican church was disestablished after the American
Revolution, its descendant, the new Episcopal church, would continue
to attract educated and well-off members associated with the southern
social elite.
Evangelicalism began its rise to influence in the South during the mid-eighteenth
century. Evangelical Protestantism is a religious tradition that prizes
religious experience over liturgy, theology, and other forms of religious
life. Calvinist pessimism realism about
human nature was a crucial progenitor of
Eevangelicalism, giving it a characteristic
concern for the inevitability of sinfulness and the need for a strong
religious community and discipline
to contain human frailty. As evangelical Protestantism developed, however, it
came to be just
as equally characterized, though, by
the hope of redemption. Its Ttheology
gradually came to stress that God’s grace made salvation possible
for those humans who accepted it.
This recognition encouraged preaching that would
seek sought converts, giving birth to the camp
meetings and revivalism that would become such a central part of
southern life.
Evangelicalism in the South appeared with the rise of dissent within
Anglican society. English preacher George
Whitefield came to the southern colonies as well as others along
the Atlantic Coast, and his preaching helped to fire the enthusiasm
of the
Great Awakening. He offered the hope of a “new
birth,” an emotional conversion experience that resulted from intense
preaching that moved many people who had been unmoved by Anglican sacramentalism
and as well as that elite denomination's perceived
worldliness. While the impact of the Great Awakening in the South was
limited, it
did lead
northern
Presbyterians,
such as
the
Rev. Samuel
Davies, to settle in Virginia and establish an evangelical presence.
More important than the Great Awakening in changing the Anglican dominance
of religion in the South was the movement of increasing numbers of settlers
into backcountry areas of Virginia and the Carolinas after 1750. Attracted
by inexpensive land, Scotchs-Irish Presbyterians, Separate Baptists
from the northern colonies, and German Protestants moved into the Piedmont,
resulting in a surge of new Presbyterian and Baptist congregations, as
well as a new presence of Quakers, Lutherans, German Reformed Methodists,
and pietistic Protestant sects. All of these new religious influences
rested in appeals appealed to the
plain folk of the rural and backcountry areas
and resulted in the growing marginalization of Anglicans, which was made
complete with the overthrow of English authority in general during
the
American Revolution. By the 1790s, religious freedom and denominational
competition for members represented a new religious system sensibility in
the South, as across the new nation.
The Great Revival (1800-1805) launched the Second
Great Awakening in the South, beginning on the frontier, in Logan
County, [removed link:http://www.uky.edu/KentuckyAtlas/21141.html] Kentucky. The Cane
Ridge Revival was the largest associated with this awakening,
attracting 25,000 worshippers in the summer of 1801, to hear extended
preaching.
Plain folk in the southern interior Upcountry found
a passionate new religion and Cane Ridge became a hearth for grassroots
evangelical
growth.
The
Second
Great Awakening was national in scope, as Baptists and Methodists,
especially effective at recruiting plain folk, rose
to new prominence as they proved especially effective at recruiting
plain
folk. They became the center of a more democratic
religion complementary to that coincided
with the politics of the early nineteenth century that .
It empowered plain folks
in the South and elsewhere.
Evangelicals, as historian Rhys Isaac notes,
initiated a countercultural movement were
a counterculture to gentry planter culture. They saw religious conversion
as a transforming
experience
that
led them to embrace an egalitarian fellowship with the redeemed, whether
lowly in societal terms or not. Slaves, women, Indians, and the
socially marginalized others were
welcomed as enthusiastic into new communities
of enthused believers, who embraced individualistic conversion and
shared a rigorous
moral austerity. The planter lifestyle,
with its indulgence and worldliness, became a target for criticism by
young evangelical preachers, who were often itinerants and thus especially
suspicious of to the powers that
be in a hierarchical society. Women prayed, prophesied, and exhorted and
in other ways exercised their spiritual gifts in
unprecedented ways in exercising their spiritual
gifts. Evangelicals insisted that converts take up the cross of Jesus,
sometimes alienating which ranked above
even the paternalistic expectations of the male-dominated
household of the South. Evangelicals in the early nineteenth century
sometimes alienated not only planters but plain folk men with their
radical vision
that empowered all who put spiritual equality ahead of earthly values.
This empowerment was perhaps especially significant in terms of African
Americans in the South. Anglicans had been ineffective in efforts to
convert slaves, but early evangelicals criticized slavery, sought black
converts,
and licensed black exhorters. The first black congregation in the southern
colonies, was Baptist, that founded in Silver
Bluff, Georgia, in 1773, was Baptist, and
Mechal Sobel has documented dozens of black Baptist churches by 1830.
Most
slaves worshipped, though,
as part
of biracial churches that would become even more numerous after 1830.
In time, Eevangelicals came
to compromised
their early social radicalism, though, as part of their accommodation
to existing
hierarchies patterns of southern life
and their attempts to gain greater influence over the region.
In the first four decades of the nineteenth century, settlers from
southern
states moved into the Old Southwest, creating a new Cotton Kingdom
and extending familial and ideological relationships across what we
would now call the Deep South. Evangelicals were expansive and increasingly
successful in this area, and as they
abandoned their original hostility to slavery and restricted black
preachers. Evangelical doctrine increasingly now restricted
women as well, taking away their right to vote in congregations, and limiting
their public role, and emphasizing family
life as a new evangelical ideal. Evangelicalism still focused on aggressively
seeking
converts, demanding moral discipline, and dominating local congregational
communities, but it increasingly influenced discussions of public issues
as well, providing moral meaning to a southern society that
was economically and politically still in formation.
Emblematic A symbol of the evangelical
consolidation of influence in the early nineteenth century was the attempt
to convert
Native Americans. As settlers moved
into the Old Southwest, pressures mounted for removal of Indians from
their native lands. Long before this moment, traditional Indian religion
had evolved through contact with Christian missionaries. This contact
had disrupted Native societies and besieged traditional religious identities.
A Cherokee
Ghost Dance Movement (1811-1813) produced apocalyptic visions that
predicted the destruction of whites, but its failure proved to be a
turning
point in that tribe’s history, as increasingly when Christianity
replaced traditional Indian worldviews. Baptists first sent missionaries
to the
Cherokee
Nation
shortly after that, in 1819, with Methodist circuit riders appearing
in late 1823. Evangelical stress on spiritual experience over doctrine,
an
informal worship ritual, the empowerment of Cherokees themselves as evangelists,
and congregational-based authority all promoted acceptance of Protestantism
among the Cherokees and other Southeastern Indians. When the federal
government forced removal of the Five Civilized Tribes to the Indian
Territory, the
Indians took forms of evangelical southern religion with them and planted them in what would become a border area
of the
South.
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