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Mastering Christianity - Missionary Anglicanism and Slavery in the Atlantic World (Hardcover, New)
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Mastering Christianity - Missionary Anglicanism and Slavery in the Atlantic World (Hardcover, New)
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Beginning in 1701, missionary-minded Anglicans launched one of the
earliest and most sustained efforts to Christianize the enslaved
people of Britain's colonies. Hundreds of clergy traveled to
widely-dispersed posts in North America, the Caribbean, and West
Africa under the auspices of the Society for the Propagation of the
Gospel in Foreign Parts (SPG) and undertook this work. Based on a
belief in the essential unity of humankind, the Society's
missionaries advocated for the conversion and better treatment of
enslaved people. Yet, only a minority of enslaved people embraced
Anglicanism, while a majority rejected it. Mastering Christianity
closely explores these missionary encounters.
The Society hoped to make slavery less cruel and more paternalistic
but it came to stress the ideas that chattel slavery and
Christianity were entirely compatible and could even be mutually
beneficial. While important early figures saw slavery as troubling,
over time the Society accommodated its message to slaveholders,
advocated for laws that tightened colonial slave codes, and
embraced slavery as a missionary tool. The SPG owned hundreds of
enslaved people on its Codrington plantation in Barbados, where it
hoped to simultaneously make profits and save souls. In Africa, the
Society cooperated with English slave traders in establishing a
mission at Cape Coast Castle, at the heart of the trans-Atlantic
slave trade. The SPG helped lay the foundation for black
Protestantism but pessimism about the project grew internally and
black people's frequent skepticism about Anglicanism was construed
as evidence of the inherent inferiority of African people and their
American descendants. Through its texts and practices, the SPG
provided important intellectual, political, and moral support for
slaveholding around the British empire. The rise of antislavery
sentiment challenged the principles that had long underpinned
missionary Anglicanism's program, however, and abolitionists viewed
the SPG as a significant institutional opponent to their agenda.
In this work, Travis Glasson provides a unique perspective on the
development and entrenchment of a pro-slavery ideology by showing
how English religious thinking furthered the development of slavery
and supported the institution around the Atlantic world.
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