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Forging a Christian Order - South Carolina Baptists, Race, and Slavery, 1696-1860 (Hardcover)
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Forging a Christian Order - South Carolina Baptists, Race, and Slavery, 1696-1860 (Hardcover)
Series: America's Baptists
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A significant contribution to the historiography of religion in the
U.S. south, Forging a Christian Order challenges and complicates
the standard view that eighteenth-century evangelicals exerted both
religious and social challenges to the traditional mainstream
order, not maturing into middle-class denominations until the
nineteenth century. Instead, Kimberly R. Kellison argues,
eighteenth-century White Baptists in South Carolina used the Bible
to fashion a Christian model of slavery that recognized the
humanity of enslaved people while accentuating contrived racial
differences. Over time this model evolved from a Christian practice
of slavery to one that expounded on slavery as morally right.
Elites who began the Baptist church in late-1600s Charleston
closely valued hierarchy. It is not surprising, then, that from its
formation the church advanced a Christian model of slavery. The
American Revolution spurred the associational growth of the
denomination, reinforcing the rigid order of the authoritative
master and subservient enslaved person, given that the theme of
liberty for all threatened slaveholders' way of life. In lowcountry
South Carolina in the 1790s, where a White minority population
lived in constant anxiety over control of the bodies of enslaved
men and women, news of revolt in St. Domingue (Haiti) led to
heightened fears of Black violence. Fearful of being associated
with antislavery evangelicals and, in turn, of being labeled as an
enemy of the planter and urban elite, White ministers orchestrated
a major transformation in the Baptist construction of paternalism.
Forging a Christian Order provides a comprehensive examination of
the Baptist movement in South Carolina from its founding to the eve
of the Civil War and reveals that the growth of the Baptist church
in South Carolina paralleled the growth and institutionalization of
the American system of slavery-accommodating rather than
challenging the prevailing social order of the economically
stratified Lowcountry.
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