The years around 1830 were fateful ones for a developing
sense of a southern
sectional identity. While social and cultural
distinctiveness had already developed
in the southern states below
the Mason-Dixon Line,
the
Missouri
Controversy [removed link: http://www.senate.gov/vtour/mizoo.htm;
inserted link: http://www.loc.gov/rr/program/bib/ourdocs/Missouri.html](1819-21)
nurtured a new political significance to differences between a “North” and
a “South.” The
vote on extension of slavery into the West seen in the debate on admitting
Missouri
to the Union went along
strictly sectional lines, North and South
., Politicians
were constructing sections with profound political significance for
the division of power within the Union.
Two events around 1830 added to the growing sectional consciousness
in the nation, and both had religious meaning. William Lloyd Garrison’s
publication of
The
Liberator
called for the immediate end of slavery, making the issue a predominantly
moral one. Shortly afterwards,
Nat
Turner’s Rebellion
brought
the first a large-scale slave
uprising, with Turner acting out of prophetic belief, rooted in the
Bible’s
Old Testament, that he would bring his people out of bondage. After
these two compelling events,
southern whites used religion to carve out new
relationships
with to northern abolitionists
by attacking their morality and
with to southern
blacks
, who represented to them internal subversion
based in misreading the same
Sscriptures they read.
One
response of southern white
s response to
these forces was a new mission to the slaves. South Carolina Methodists
were most successful in establishing
specific missions, while an evangelical alliance led by minister-planter
Charles
Colcock Jones in Liberty County, Georgia, promoted an idealistic
vision of an evangelical biracial community that would lead to the
end of slavery.
These iniatives The
missions themselves were of limited
impact, but they symbolized a new willingness among slaveowners to
allow white
preachers and, sometimes, black exhorters to preach the gospel to their
slaves. The gospel that appeared here was one that stressed moral discipline
and obedience of slaves to masters, with ultimate hopes for redemption
in heaven.
White Southern religious leaders
assumed new responsibilities for the fate of slave souls, which was
a response to their overriding
concern to convert everyone, their concern to achieve greater social
control of slaves, and their belief that slavery was not an inherently
immoral institution.
Blacks responded to the
new evangelical message,
though, for different reasons than those advanced by slaveowner-sanctioned
preachers. The potential for spiritual equality, and even the hope for
earthly liberty, could be taken from evangelicalism, and that
held
was a powerful appeal
for to
slaves. Evangelicalism’s informal, spirit-driven style of worship could
evoke remembrances of the religious ecstasies of African dance religions
,
another reason to embrace the faith. Nowhere else in southern society
did African Americans find the status that they could achieve
as
in churches. Some African Americans worshipped in separate black churches,
but
most slave worship was in biracial churches.
bBlack Baptists and Methodists
had shaped evolving
Eevangelicalism
in general since the earliest revivals.
Most slave worship was
in biracial churches. The generation before the Civil War represented
the one moment in southern religious life when blacks and whites shared
the same ritual and spatial setting, listen
inged
to the same sermons, part
akingook
of communion together, and shar
inged
church disciplinary procedures.
Such settings were usually segregated,
but tThe interaction within biracial
churches represented a foundation for later spiritual commonalities among
blacks and whites in the South. Slaves also worshipped in secret praise
services in the slave quarters—the
ir “invisible
religio.”
(Raboteau, 1978). Here, God stood
in judgment of the Christianity of the slaveowners, and slave preachers
applied the biblical story of Exodus to their own people, with ultimate
liberation a hope.
Slave
Sspirituals became the creative
group expression of these aspirations. The
Rring
Sshout [Deleted
link to: http://www.uga.edu/columns/082498/weeklyread.html; inserted link
to http://historymatters.gmu.edu/d/5759] was the most distinctive
expression of religious worship in the praise service, with African-derived
dancing and body movement emphasized. The invisible religion of the slave
quarters also included conjure, a system of spiritual influence that combined
herbal medicine with magic and sometimes gave surprising authority to
slave practitioners who believed they could affect whites as well as blacks.
While slaves saw in the Bible a vision of spiritual liberation, southern
white religious leaders increasingly after 1830 used the same
Sscriptures
to justify slavery, as part of their defense against abolitionist criticism.
One strain of Tthe
proslavery argument saw southern society as the last bulwark against
an inhumane industrial
,
free society order that had
abandoned
traditional Christian orthodoxy.
Ministers cited biblical examples of the coexistence
of
Christianity and slavery, quoted Old Testament approvals of slavery,
cited Paul’s New Testament letters that taught
that servants
should obey their masters, and interpreted a passage from the book
of Genesis to
mean that blacks were descendants of the sinner Ham and destined forever
to be bondsmen. Southern writers developed the image of plantations
as well-ordered pastoral places, presided over by benevolent patriarchs,
an image with deep roots in Western biblical tradition.
 |
Southern religious
leaders made a major contribution to promoting southern nationalism
through by the separation secession of
the major southern denominations into regional institutions.
Well before the nation’s political parties
separated along regional sectional lines,
the churches did so, beginning in the 1840s, when southern Baptists
withdrew from fellowship
with their northern brethren congregations over
the issue of whether a slaveowner could be a missionary. and sSouthern
Methodists withdrew from other
American U.S. Methodists
after debates on whether a slaveowner could serve as a bishop.
One
group of conservative southern Presbyterians
split from Nnortherners in
1857, and after the Civil War a new Presbyterian Church in the
Confederate States of America appeared.
The Episcopalians did not formally divide, but a Confederate
Episcopal church did operate during the Civil War years. In
the aftermath
of the divisions came disputes over who controlled church property
in some areas, unleashing fears, angers, and suspicions among
religious people and creating disputes over who would control
denominational life in border areas. The Baptists, Methodists,
and Presbyterians of the South did not reunite with their northern
coreligionists after the war, creating enduring regional sectional institutions
that became carriers perpetuators of
a southern cultural identity. |
|
Postcard of First Baptist Church,
New Bern, NC [added link to: www.lib.ecu.ncc
/historyfiction/document/fbc] |
The challenge for Roman Catholics and Jews in the South before the
Civil War was to maintain their separate religious identities and yet
find ways to accommodate to a
regional biracial society dominated
demographically and culturally by evangelical Protestants. Catholics
had long been
a major presence in the upper South, going back to the founding of
Maryland, and in Gulf Coast areas, but the antebellum years saw the
coming of Irish and German immigrants who spread the Catholic influence
through other areas of the South. Most Catholic immigrants to the United
States went to northern cities and formed major communities
.,
which This happened in the
South also in places like New Orleans and Savannah, but
in
most places the
rural nature of southern life gave a peculiar character to the Catholic
church
in
the region.
The
small numbers of priests and
parish
es led the Catholic leadership to
spend its resources on building churches, recruiting priests and nuns,
and encouraging devotionalism.
The leadership also had to cope with interethnic conflicts among French,
Irish, and German Catholics. The Catholic
cChurch in the South
sanctified the political order of slavery and states’ rights, with
Bishop Augustin Verot famously delivering a sermon at the beginning
of the Civil War
that justified slavery in the same proslavery language that other
Ssoutherners
had been using for a generation.
Jews were an early presence in southern colonies, and by 1820 South
Carolina had the largest Jewish population in the United States. Early
Jewish immigrants to the South were from the Iberian Peninsula, with
those from central Europe coming in larger numbers after 1840. They
embraced the religious freedom that the nation offered, as well as
its economic opportunities. Many became merchants and professionals,
carving out distinctive roles in a slave society that did not have
a place for immigrant
workers laborers but
did welcome their contributions. Jews became active in political and
civic activities throughout the
nineteenth century, and Jewish elected officials served throughout
the South. They justified slavery and became slaveowners; they spoke
the language of honor and fought duels to defend it. Despite such assimilation,
intolerance of Jews was also a part of southern religious history,
with Civil War frustrations leading to Jews
' becoming scapegoats for
some other
Ssoutherners.
With Tthe
inception
of the Confederate
States of America
represented the one time that southern sectional identity
became a national identity
.,
and sSouthern religion
played a crucial role in buttressing the war effort. For a generation,
white ministers had preached that slavery
was a divinely-ordained institution, and whatever misgivings many of
them had about war, they rallied around
the Confederacy and gave moral support through preaching that the southern
cause was a holy war. They blessed the troops going off to war and
saw victories as God’s blessings and defeats as God’s
chastizements chastisements for
their failures. Religious institutions declared days of fasting and
thanksgiving to encourage understanding of the spiritual nature
of the war. Ministers cared for soldiers, preached revivals, led prayer
groups, and performed mass baptisms. Behind the lines, women joined
with ministers in staging rallies to support the troops, preaching
sacrifice for home and God, feeding those in need, teaching the children
of veterans, nursing the sick, and leading missionary societies. The
war promoted new roles for women in southern religious life, as they
took over new responsibilities for praying, counseling, and even conducting
home services in the absence of ministers off in the war effort. Because
of the disruptions of public worship, religion became more private,
and the failure of the Confederate holy war brought a crisis of faith
for many
white Ssoutherners.
The
Reconstruction period (1865-1877) [added
link: http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/amex/reconstruction/program/index.html] brought
enormous challenges and major change to religious patterns
in the South.
War had been disruptive
of normal religious life, and denominations had to rebuild churches,
reincorporate ministers
back into congregations, and deal with
the spiritual traumas among defeated white
Ssoutherners.
Northern religious groups entered the South
, as missionaries
to a benighted people. Northern missionaries
to the South wanted
to promote reconciliation
with southern whites between
the regions and provide relief and reform for
freedmen former
slaves,
but white
Ssoutherners rejected
their
efforts role in the region,
seeing them as an extension of Union
armies that had conquered them and now wanted to
alter overturn their
entire civilization. Whites embraced their
traditional, regionally sectionally-based
evangelical denominations, seeing Confederate defeat as a
chastizement chastisement from
God who was nonetheless preparing his chosen people for coming challenges.
During the era of Religious Reconstruction
many also
saw a momentous change in the South. Blacks joined northern-based religious
groups like
the
African
Methodist Episcopal Church and they withdrew from the prewar, biracial
evangelical churches in which they had once worshipped, creating their
own independent churches. This occurred as a result of African American
frustration with the unwillingness of white Christians to
agree
to give
them a truly equal role in participation and gover
nance of local
congregations and ecclesiastical associations. The separation of white
and black
Christians in the South established a pattern of racially segregated
worship that has long endured
in the region. Blacks now controlled
their own religious destinies
, though. Churches became important
organizing agencies in the political conflicts of Reconstruction, and
afterwards
they were among the central institutions of black life in the South.
The folk spirituality of
the slaves' praise
services merged with the denomination
alism
of evangelical Protestantism to create unique religious institutions.