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After slavery was abolished, how far would white America go toward
including African Americans as full participants in the country's
institutions? Conventional historical timelines mark the end of
Reconstruction in the year 1877, but the Methodist Episcopal Church
continued to wrestle with issues of racial inclusion for decades
after political support for racial reform had receded. An 1844
schism over slavery split Methodism into northern and southern
branches, but Union victory in the Civil War provided the northern
Methodists with the opportunity to send missionaries and teachers
into the territory that had been occupied by the Methodist
Episcopal Church, South. To a remarkable degree, the M.E. Church
succeeded in appealing to freed slaves and white Unionists and
thereby built up a biracial membership far surpassing that of any
other Protestant denomination. A Long Reconstruction details the
denomination's journey with unification and justice. African
Americans who joined did so in a spirit of hope that through
religious fellowship and cooperation they could gain respect and
acceptance and ultimately assume a position of equality and
brotherhood with whites. However, as segregation gradually took
hold in the South, many northern Methodists evinced the same
skepticism as white southerners about the fitness of African
Americans for positions of authority and responsibility in an
interracial setting. The African American membership was never
without strong white allies who helped to sustain the Church's
official stance against racial caste but, like the nation as a
whole, the M.E. Church placed a growing priority on putting their
broken union back together.
This book examines the career of Rufus Anderson, the central figure
in the formation and implementation of missionary ideology in the
middle decades of the nineteenth century. Corresponding Secretary
of the American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions from
1832 to 1866, Anderson effectively set the terms of debate on
missionary policy on both sides of the Atlantic and indeed long
after his death. In telling his story, Harris also speaks to basic
questions in nineteenth-century American history and in the
relationship between American culture and the cultures of what
later came to be known as the third world.
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