How the Civil War Changed Southern Evangelicalism

There is still today a Southern Baptist Church. More than a century and a half after the Civil War, and decades after the Methodists and Presbyterians reunited with their Yankee neighbors, America’s most powerful evangelical denomination remains defined, right down to the name over the door, by an 1845 split over slavery.

Southern denominations faced enormous social and political pressure from plantation owners. Public expressions of dissent on the subject of slavery in the South were not merely outlawed, they were a death sentence. Baptist ministers who rejected slavery, like South Carolina’s William Henry Brisbane, were forced to flee to the North. Otherwise, they would end up like Methodist minister Anthony Bewley, who was lynched in Texas in 1860, his bones left exposed at local store to be played with by children. Whiteness offered protection from many of the South’s cruelties, but that protection stopped at the subject of race. No one who dared speak truth to power on the subject of slavery, or later Jim Crow, could expect protection.

Generation after generation, Southern pastors adapted their theology to thrive under a terrorist state. Principled critics were exiled or murdered, leaving voices of dissent few and scattered. Southern Christianity evolved in strange directions under ever-increasing isolation. Preachers learned to tailor their message to protect themselves. If all you knew about Christianity came from a close reading of the New Testament, you’d expect that Christians would be hostile to wealth, emphatic in protection of justice, sympathetic to the point of personal pain toward the sick, persecuted and the migrant, and almost socialist in their economic practices. None of these consistent Christian themes served the interests of slave owners, so pastors could either abandon them, obscure them, or flee.

Notes:

Folksonomies: civil war evangelicalism

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/religion and spirituality/islam (0.380122)
/law, govt and politics/government (0.274611)

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Concepts:
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Slavery in the United States (0.941472): dbpedia_resource
American Civil War (0.893605): dbpedia_resource
Southern United States (0.852057): dbpedia_resource
Christianity (0.767650): dbpedia_resource
Southern Baptist Convention (0.662052): dbpedia_resource
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Christian terms (0.621547): dbpedia_resource

 Why White Evangelicalism Is So Cruel
Periodicals>Magazine Article:  Ladd, Chris (MAR 11, 2018), Why White Evangelicalism Is So Cruel, Retrieved on 2018-03-20
  • Source Material [www.forbes.com]
  • Folksonomies: religion civil war