In the 1600s Colonial French settlers brought Christianity into
the lands that are now the state of Mississippi. Throughout the
period of French rule and the period of Spanish dominion that
followed, Roman Catholicism remained the principal religion. By the
time that statehood was achieved in 1817, Mississippi was
attracting Methodists, Baptists, Presbyterians, and other
Protestant evangelical faiths at a remarkable pace, and by the
twentieth century, religion in Mississippi was dominantly
Protestant and evangelical.In this book, Randy J. Sparks traces the
roots of evangelical Christianity in the state and shows how the
evangelicals became a force of cultural revolution. They embraced
the poorer segments of society, welcomed high populations of both
women and African Americans, and deeply influenced ritual and
belief in the state's vision of Christianity. In the 1830s as the
Mississippi economy boomed, so did evangelicalism. As Protestant
faiths became wedded to patriarchal standards, slaveholding, and
southern political tradition, seeds were sown for the war that
would erupt three decades later.Until Reconstruction many
Mississippi churches comprised biracial congregations and featured
women in prominent roles, but as the Civil War and the racial split
cooled the evangelicals' liberal fervor and drastically changed the
democratic character of their religion into archconservatism, a
strong but separate black church emerged. As dominance by
Protestant conservatives solidified, Jews, Catholics, and Mormons
struggled to retain their religious identities while conforming to
standards set by white Protestant society.As Sparks explores the
dissonance between the state's powerful evangelical voice and
Mississippi's social and cultural mores, he reveals the striking
irony of faith and society in conflict. By the time of the Civil
Rights movement of the 1960s, religion, formerly a liberal force,
had become one of the leading proponents of segregation, gender
inequality, and ethnic animosity among whites in the Magnolia
State. Among blacks, however, the churches were bastions of racial
pride and resistance to the forces of oppression.
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