World War II brought more change to the
American U.S. South
than any other event in its history, even the legendary Civil War. The
World War upset traditional patterns of
thought and behavior, exposing southerners to new ways of thinking, and it launched
economic developments that would overcome the long
period era of
poverty
after the Civil
War. It opened a new period
in which when the
South experienced fundamental change
s in a social
system that had long shaped
ideology
and experience
in the
region. Changes
in communication and transportation, population growth, urbanization, the end
of
the one-party political system, consumerism, secularization—all pushed
the South
toward change. Yet the
region South retained
a self-consciousness promoted by new
national acceptance of cultural identities of all shapes, by appreciation of
southern cultural traditions
associated with
the region, by a
new concern for tourism, by
nostalgia, and by the functionality of
regional southern organizations
within a national federalist framework. Black southerners became among the most
energetic examiners
of the mythology of the white South
, as well as also of
their own self-consciousness as southerners. Appreciation of regions within
the
South
has also grown, seen in
the emergence of new
conceptualizations of those regions,
such
as
the
Mid-South
around Memphis, Tennessee
,; a
central Texas complex within the larger, traditional Southwestern region
,; the
Atlanta metro region; and
a
central Florida region anchored by the fantasies of Disney World.
“The South”
has always been a geography of specific places, and that continues to be so. Through
all the changes,
religion
has represented a force for stabilization in
the region, with the traditionally-dominant denominations
have retain
inged their
hold
on the region. While a force for spiritual normalcy and often disengagement
from the public sphere, religion has also been deeply involved in both liberal
and conservative political
crusades
, through both liberal and conservative causes.
The
civil rights
movement was a central moral landmark for the South. African
American church leaders, such as
Martin
Luther King, Jr.,
Fred
Shuttlesworth, and
Ralph
David Abernathy, emerged as the leading edge of reform, and local congregations
provided the foot soldiers for the movement’s nonviolent protests and boycotts.
The protests drew from principles of nonviolence that King learned from Indian
leader
Mahatmas Gandhi, but equally significant sources were Christian teachings on
social
justice and the heritage of the southern black church’s witness against the evils
of segregation. The civil rights movement made the end of Jim Crow segregation
a compelling
moral challenge to the white South. In the aftermath of the Supreme Court’s
Brown
v. the Board of Education decision, major southern white denominational leaders
and regional meetings counseled compliance with the call for desegregation,
but
most rank-and-file church
members rebelled, rejecting the social changes that loomed. Some ministers used
the same biblical justifications for segregation as their ancestors had used
to justify slavery.
Progressive clergymen who advocated acceptance of integration often lost their
pulpits; ministers who ignored the issue risked moral irrelevancy
in the
face of a serious moral
issue.
Most Few white religious leaders
,
in the end, advised moderation and opposed violence, but few came out forcefully
against the Jim Crow system. In the end,
white church people
reluctantly acquiesced to racial change, although their segregated churches and
private schools
could remain
ed a retreat
s
from those changes. Traditions of separate
black and
white worship were deeply held and
reflected represented differing
worship styles as well as
continued racial divisions. Southern clergy
men have
been among the leaders
of racial reconciliation
efforts in the recent South, often working through community groups to promote
principles
of Christian fellowship across social boundaries.
The traditional evangelical denominations, the Baptists, Methodists, and Presbyterians,
have long been at the heart of
a regionally-based the
South's religious
system culture, and they retained their hold
on
the region during this period
of social
change.
As earlier, Baptists
continue to represent
about half of the church-affiliated population of the South, Methodists
representabout
a quarter, and Presbyterians
10% ten percent.
The Southern Baptist Convention
(SBC)
has
been a
"folk religion of the
South,” and yet it has also been the largest
American U.S. Protestant
church, thanks
in part
ly to establishing
new congregations
in the West, far beyond the
original southern
borders of the
denomination in the nineteenth century.
Increasingly a
corporate-dominated bureaucracy, Tthe
SBC
has long been closely allied
with the
South’s power structure,
lending its conservative
voice to in raising prophetic issues of racial
and
social injustice
in the South, and increasingly
a
corporate-dominated
bureaucracy. Fundamentalists
have
taken over institutional control of the denomination since the 1980s, establishing
creeds for the enforcement of orthodoxy, reshaping its educational institutions
to
narrow the range of teaching options, emphasizing the primacy of the inerrancy
of the Bible, and moving away from traditional Baptist support for separation
of church and
state to support, among other government-enforced social causes, prayer in schools.
Many moderates have left the SBC, weakening its numerical strength and leaving
a
narrow
ed, if ideologically focused, leadership.
Methodists and Presbyterians also remain dominant church traditions in the contemporary
South. Southern Methodists rejoined Methodists from other parts of the nation
in a 1939
merger, and in 1968 the Evangelical United Brethren joined with them to form
the United
Methodist church
. , of which Methodists in
the South
represent about a quarter of
the national membership.
Unlike
Baptists, Methodists have retained
their Wesleyan stress on piety
above creed. Southern Presbyterians have undergone more recent dramatic denominational
change than Methodists, having reunited with their northern coreligionists in
1983.
Conservatives had already broken away to form the Presbyterian Church in America
because of their fears
over of the liberalism
of mainstream southern Presbyterians,
fears
only
augmented confirmed by the national
merger.
Black Christianity has also remained a powerful spiritual force in the
recent latest South.
The clerical role in leading the civil rights movement gave
the churches
considerable
moral
authority, buttressing their historic and continuing efforts in providing fellowship,
social services, recreation, sanctuary from the larger society, and a gospel
of hope to
marginalized oppressed people.
They have long given a prophetic dimension to southern Protestantism that few
other
religious
institutions have provided.
The National Baptist Convention
remains the largest
black Baptist group, and the African Methodist Episcopal church is the leading
black Methodist body. The movement for a specifically black theology
has also
had
its adherents in the South,
dating back to the call for black power in the late 1960s. African American ministers
within predominantly white denominations particularly championed black theology
as a
sometimes militant demand for true spiritual integration. The United Methodist
church struggled into the 1970s to
integrate the desegregate
d the central
jurisdiction
into the church’s
overall ecclesiastical system, and its failure to adequately do so
left a
moral
gap for allowed black Methodist clergymen to
exploit
the guilt and moral indecisions
of white Methodists.
Black theology had influence within black denominations, but nowhere did it
convert
the
leadership or attain cultural authority.
Secularization
slowly loosened the prevents as
tight
a hold
of
religious
ideals ideology upon public morals
as
once existed in the South.
Attempting
to address
this problem has been t The new right political
movement that began in the 1980s with the Moral Majority saw the rise of the
Religious Roundtable and the Christian Coalition, and
has received a
new boost
through the presidency
of George W. Bush
, has attempted to address this slippage.
While
a
national movement,
the religious right hopes it
is
an
effort to
impose
on
society and church institutions
a discipline
that
believers adherents believe see once
having existed
in the small
towns and rural society of the earlier South
and which became before
becoming besieged
in the
era of dramatic social changes
in of the
1960s. The religious right aims
to anchor
the nation’s
political direction in a moral outlook grounded in
the Bible its
biblical interpretation.
It has been a n National
movement, but
with many southern leaders
of the movement have included
many southern figures, such
as Jerry
Falwell,
Pat Robertson,
and
Ralph Reed. The religious right engages
those issues
it
sees as part of an agenda of
“traditional values,”
especially those related to family, and including
the issues
related to family definition, as well as of abortion,
pornography,
prayer
in
schools, and before its defeat,
the Equal
Rights
Amendment. Concern for prohibition of the sale, or even consumption, of alcoholic
beverages is not a part of this political agenda, a major departure from the
traditional southern ethics of the churches. The new agenda represents, then,
a continued
concern belief that
the fundamentalist,
evangelical churches
have to must impose their moral code
upon a
society in need of discipline.
Religion continues to define the
American U.S. South
as a distinctive part of the United States. It
contributes helps to
defin
eing debates on public
policy issues and provides
an on-going
organizational base for political campaigns across the ideological spectrum.
It supports a needed infrastructure of social services and educational institutions
in
a southern region
s where of
often underfunded public
agencies
are underfunded. It offers a still compelling
worldview
to the majority of the South’s Christians, giving meaning in troubled times and
empowering the poor and marginalized.
It Southern
religion has supported
a peculiar variety of
religious
pluralism within the United States, allowing for religious minorities to flourish.
Forms
of religion identified with the South—
Eevangelicalism,
Ffundamentalism,
Ppentecostalism—have
gone into traveled throughout the nation,
a
prime
example
of
the “southernization of the United States
,.”
Meanwhile, and southerners
themselves live in places that often cannot be seen
so
much as southern
so much as
parts of a national or even
parts of a global
network.
Recent The
new immigration
, especially the arrival of Hispanics
in record numbers, has
increased
the
Roman
Catholic
role in the South
, especially
through the arrival of Hispanics
in record numbers,
making the South a new national center of immigration. Americans moving south
ward
since the 1970s have brought
to the region denominations and traditions
once
seldom seen
there in the South,
adding to its religious diversity.