Defenders of a self-consciously “southern” civilization
after the Civil War came to use the term “way of life” to indicate an ideological
defense of a peculiar pattern of institutions and attitudes associated
with the
region South. White
s
southerners saw their system of paternalistic white supremacy as
the essence of a
regional southern civilization,
but the “way of life” included countless specific
attitudes and customs rooted in
cultural beliefs
and practices regional
life and reified as a constructed social identity.
Religious institutions and leaders gave a spiritual gloss on the “southern
way of life,” infusing it with transcendent significance
at times and
often blurring
the lines between Christianity and southernism. Above and beyond religion’s
defense of a self-consciously southern ideology, religion in the South
was indeed
distinctive within national patterns of religion,
and but
more importantly, it was a central part
of life for many people
in the region.
The generations fFrom the end of
Reconstruction to World War II
, lived
with pronounced orthodoxies at the heart of the belief in a peculiar
way of life, and religion played a role in each. A a tangible
memory of the Civil War experience
, increasingly
mythologized, haunted
white southerners
., for example, and
tThe spiritual interpretation of
Confederate defeat became a
southern sectional civil
religion—the religion of the
Lost
Cause. Its saints were leaders like Robert E. Lee and Stonewall
Jackson, and its ritual celebrations were Confederate Memorial Day
and dedications of monuments
to the Lost Cause. Organizations
like the United Confederate Veterans and the United Daughters of the
Confederacy
were the epitome of
white cultural
sanctity authority
in the region, and they regularly used religious language to sacralize
the Confederacy. The 1890s witnessed
the strengthening of the Lost Cause, with increased organizational
and ritual activity, in the same decade as the hardening of
southern
racial attitudes white racism. Indeed,
the legal codification and institutionalization of white supremacy
represented
another of those orthodoxies at the
heart of the southern way of life. While white churches often criticized
the worst of racial violence, they nonetheless blessed Jim Crow segregation,
disfranchisement of black voters, and other manifestations of racism.
The second Ku Klux Klan, which appeared after World War I, tapped evangelical
moralism as a foundation of its appeal for white purity. Evangelicalism
itself stressed individual morality, through avoidance of personal
sins, but the churches moved beyond private morality to campaign for
laws to regulate gambling, Sunday recreation, dancing, and most importantly,
the sale of alcoholic beverages.
After the Civil War Tthese
orthodoxies
need
to be seen as persisted within a developing
society
after the Civil War that
balanced continuities mythologized
its with
the past
while constructing and a
new forward-
lookingfacing ideology
—all
of which became known as the proclaiming a New
South. Although most southerners continued to farm, live in
rural areas and small towns,
and
preserve adapt many of their
earlier folkways, a sense of change was also a part of southern life.
Most notably, Tthe
railroad
most notably came to symbolize
a new freedom of movement and the possibilities of economic development
. ,
but such d Developing industries as
textiles, timber, and mining brought southerners off the farms and
into new work and business arrangements.
Southern religious leaders blessed the wealth that came out of
capitalist economic
development
., and i Imposing
new urban churches began to appear as centers of social prestige, economic
power, and cultural authority.
Defeat
of the southern cause in the Civil War led evangelical Protestants
to fear for their future, but their energetic efforts at evangelism
and missionary work strengthened their role in southern life by the
turn of the twentieth century. While an evangelical worldview had come
to characterize much of the South before the Civil War, the postwar
period saw rising membership in evangelical churches and participation
in church life. The Southern Baptist Convention
,; the
Methodist Episcopal Church, South
,; and the Presbyterian Church
in the United States consolidated
their independence as
regionally distinctive mainstream churches
of the New South.
By the turn of the twentieth century, black church membership was 2.7
million out of a population of 8.3 million, an amazing commitment to
the
churches as the central institutions of southern black life. The
largest
denomination was the Baptists, especially the National Baptist Convention,
which had consolidated in 1895
, attracted the largest
African American membership. The next largest black denomination
was the Methodists, embodied in the African Methodist Episcopal church,
the African Methodist Episcopal Zion church, and the Colored Methodist
Episcopal church. Black church doctrine was often similar to that of white
evangelical denominations—fundamentalist and biblically centered, otherworldly,
fatalistic, and moralistically focused on individual sinfulness.
In
a racist society, Bblack churches
always had the challenge of creating nurturing spaces
as sanctuaries
for their people
who suffered abuses from
being outside the circle of white orthodoxies. Black religion affirmed
the equality of the individual, whatever the
larger white
society was saying, and the church represented one of the few institutions
affirming the ultimate dignity and worth of blacks in the Jim Crow South.
Although critics would later deride black preachers as Uncle Toms who
assimilated to the caste system, the church provided the base for social
dissent and
collective protest whenever conditions
made it possible in the twentieth-century South. The folk religion of
the rural South was at the heart of what
W.E.B.
DuBois called the “souls of black folk” and would long inspire the
musical, literary, and artistic creativity of African Americans
(DuBois,
1904).
 |
Interior of a nNegro church in of the Mississippi Delta, Mississippi.
June 1937
Dorothea Lange
Farm Security Administration
17306C |
"Uplift
" was
the term blacks and whites used to describe their churches’ efforts
to bring reform and improvements to religious life and
regional society
in general in the New South.
It reflected Uplift
represented the
New South’s advocacy
of
the ideology of progress
, which emphasiz
eding educational
improvement,
capitalist economic development,
and moderate race relations. Middle class in outlook,
the ideology
of uUplift discouraged the
folk religion that was so prominent among the rural faithful and
it worked
to utilize
social resources to aid those
in dire straights. Women carved out new roles in missionary societies
to advance the public role of women, with Methodist women particularly
effective in going beyond traditional
male-dominated church hierarchies
to achieve new influence. Black women, as well as white, worked through
their churches and through such agencies as the Women’s Christian Temperance
Union, women’s clubs, and denominational social service groups to promote
improvements in the lives of the needy and, in the case of African
American church women, to advance the cause of social justice for black
southerners. The uplift of southern religion also included modernization
of institutional church life, with new, well-organized bureaucracies
appearing and ministers increasingly achieving professional status,
at least in growing urban areas.
 |
A Negro church at Vicksburg, Mississippi.
March 1936
Walker Evans
Farm Security Administration
RA8071-A
|
Sectarian religion
s, those new religious movements that grew out of
dissatisfaction with mainstream churches, burst forth with new manifestations
around the turn of the twentieth century. The Churches of Christ, for
example, are a Restorationist church, embodying an early New Testament
church outlook and local congregational control. Their opposition to
musical instruments in worship and to organized missionary societies
marked
them as culturally their differen
tce from
most southern Protestants, and their strong inheritance of Calvinist
theology distinguished them
from
southern evangelicals
, with whom they did not claim
identity.
The Churches of Christ gained early strength in middle and west Tennessee,
from where they spread out into influence in hill country regions of
the mid-South and into the Southwest. Holiness churches were even more
significant, emerging from Methodism as an urgent expression of a religion
of the spirit and appealing to the working class and the disfranchised
in southern life. Methodist founder John Wesley had written
of a post-conversion second infusion of grace, leading to perfectionism,
and Holiness believers
stressed this doctrine as a central point of faith. Pentecostalism
later emerged out of Holiness, practicing such spiritual manifestations
as the baptism of the Holy Spirit, speaking in tongues, and faith healing.
Pentecostals could be found on the Great Plains and in southern California
in the early twentieth century, but eastern Tennessee was one of its
hearths as well. A.J. Tomlinson had once been a leader of Holiness
members in western North Carolina and eastern Tennessee, but he later
helped found the Church of God, in Cleveland, Tennessee, one of the
most important Pentecostal groups.
In 1906 Charles
Harrison Mason founded the leading African American Pentecostal group,
the Church of God in Christ, in Memphis
in 1906. Sectarians
in
general relied often on charismatic
leadership, doctrinaire beliefs, and rigid morality to create separate
religious space and
to compete effectively
for members. The Holiness/Pentecostal tradition—the Sanctified Church
in black culture—has been an especially
creative force
in southern life, shaping generations of religious
and secular music.
In the late nineteenth century, Roman Catholics
and Jews entered a new phase of their
life experience in
the South
in the late nineteenth century,
which last
inged until
the mid-twentieth century. New immigrants from Italy, Syria, and Lebanon,
as well as
continued Irish immigration, brought more Catholics into the South
at the turn of the twentieth century, although the numbers were far
below those in northeastern and midwestern areas.
Still, tThese
newcomers people energized
the church and
prompted its efforts to
meet their needs. The church worked to preserve a Catholic identity
in the
South,
despite being
in an overwhelmingly Protestant culture, through recreational organizations,
devotional groups, use of southern-born priests, and especially, parochial
schools. The
Catholic cChurch
, however,
often succumbed to the pressures of the dominant white also
identified with the larger southern society, even establishing
Jim Crow segregation
in parishes and schools.
Despite
this accommodation, Catholics suffered increased
Nativist harassment
in the half century after 1890,
and found their
political aspirations severely limit
inged the
participation of Catholic political aspirants. Anti-Semitism was
similarly at its worst in the
decades after 1890, and the
lynching
of Leo Frank in 1915 dramatized the terror that could affect anyone
in the South who did not fit the orthodoxies of a closed society. Southern
Jews practiced their religion, but they tended to embrace Reform Judaism,
with its less restrictive dietary and ritual requirements than Jewish
Orthodoxy, making them stand out less from their Protestant neighbors.
They
sometimes built temples that
could
sometimes look
ed like Protestant churches.
Southern evangelicals are people of
the Bible, and they
could see often understood the
Jews among them as
like descendants of Old
Testament Hebrews. Catholics and Jews
thus became southerners,
albeit with differences
from the large number of
Protestants around them.
The church life of
the latter Protestants had
its own rhythms that reflected and shaped rural and small town life.
Religious ties to the southern environment
were especially manifest in the
common outdoor
water baptisms
that were a common enough feature of rural
areas, in
rivers and streams, with congregations
and onlookers standing
watch witness on
the banks nearby. The South
was an remained
largely agricultural
ly
region based, and a central ritual
of
Eevangelicalism, the revival,
usually took place in the mid-
to-late summer
when crops were in the ground and worshippers could devote their spirits
to refreshment. Evangelistic
campaigns were
among the major social and cultural activities
of
the region. Revivalism came out of the predominant concern of evangelicals
for conversion of the lost, and revivalists became celebrities
well
known in the region. Georgia Methodist Sam Jones
, was the
most famous revivalist of his time, stress
inged the
need for upright moral behavior and preach
inged Prohibition
as well as conversion. As more southerners
moved to cities, revivalism moved with them, with mass revivals
in
the 1920s becoming prominent features of urban life, conducted
by traveling preachers like
Mordecai
Ham and J.C. Bishop (the “Yodeling Cowboy Evangelist”)
becoming
prominent features of urban life.
In the late twentieth century, Billy Graham would
later take
evangelistic campaigns out of his native North
Carolina
into unprecedented international forums.
Modernity was a mixed
experience blessing for
southern religious people. They embraced the opportunities it presented
for expanding evangelical and
outreach projects, through better training for ministers in better
-funded
educational institutions, larger church facilities to provide more
services for their followers, and extended networks made possible
by improved transportation and communication. Modern thought
,
however, raised
,
however, enormous fears for people rooted in theological and social
orthodoxy. Science raised special concerns because of its rising authority
in Western Civilization, and scientific evolutionism and higher criticism
of the Bible have continued for generations to alienate southern evangelicals
committed to a literalist reading of the
Sscriptures.
The
Scopes
Trial, in the summer of 1925, became the most notorious example
of seeming southern religious hostility to the forces of modern science
leading to Critic H.L. Mencken covered the
image trial
and out of
his experience observing
religion in the South
coined as the
term "Bible
Belt
" to characterize the
South and other areas of conservative Protestantism. Despite their
theological conservatism, the South’s predominant churches did not
provide as strong a home for the national
Ffundamentalist
Mmovement
as
one might have
been thought.
To be sure, believers who saw themselves as “fundamentalist” fought
for control of their denominations in the 1920s, but they lost to
moderates.
Moreover, southerners kept close allegiance to their
regional sectional denominations,
limiting their involvement in interdenominational national fundamentalist
agencies.
After the Scopes Trial,
Ffundamentalism
as an organized movement did slowly mature in the South, embodied in
private educational institutions,
independent associations,
and interdenominational groups.