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On Jordan's stormy banks : Evangelicalism in Mississippi, 1773-1876 / Randy J. Sparks. [print]

By: Material type: TextTextPublication details: Athens : University of Georgia Press, [(c)1994.Description: viii, 281 pages ; 24 cmContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • unmediated
Carrier type:
  • volume
ISBN:
  • 082031627X
  • 9780820316277
Subject(s): LOC classification:
  • BR1642.O556 1994
  • BR1642.U5.S736.O556 1994
Available additional physical forms:
  • COPYRIGHT NOT covered - Click this link to request copyright permission:
Contents:
The growth of a night: discovery and early settlement Gentlemen, is that grammar?: plain folk versus pillared folk, 1805-1830 A Christian sisterhood: white women and the evangelical experience Heirs to the promise: Mississippi blacks, slavery, and the evangelical movement, 1799-1840 No tameness, no satiety: flush times, 1830-1860 Apples of gold in pictures of silver: from sects to denominations, 1830-1860 The lashes of a guilty conscience: evangelical proslavery and slave missions The outside row: the biracial evangelical experience, 1830-1860 A wholesome godly discipline: churches as moral courts, 1806-1870 The desolations of Zion: evangelicals in the Civil War and Reconstruction, 1861-1876.
Summary: On Jordan's Stormy Banks is a social history of southern evangelicalism from the late eighteenth century to the end of Reconstruction. By focusing on the three largest evangelical denominations in a single state - Baptist, Methodist, and Presbyterian - Randy J. Sparks charts the rise of evangelicals on the southern frontier and their remarkable increase in numbers, wealth, and influence throughout the remainder of the period.Summary: Beginning as a rebellious movement of the plain folk, evangelicals set themselves up to challenge the social hierarchy and even welcomed slaves into their congregations on terms approaching equality. Although evangelicals had largely abandoned formal opposition to slavery by the time the movement reached Mississippi, their relationship to the institution was complex and conflicted.Summary: Sparks demonstrates that the typical evangelical church was biracial and that the African-American influence in ritual and practice left an indelible imprint on southern religion. The egalitarian nature of these early churches created unique opportunities for women and blacks, and Sparks pays close attention to the important role of the female majority of church members. Similarly, evangelical practice and rhetoric was consciously democratic, linking the movement with republican virtue.Summary: .Summary: By the 1830s, the evangelicals in Mississippi had so prospered that their churches grew from sects to major denominations. This shift to the establishment divided the traditionalists from the modernists within each denomination.Summary: As the evangelicals began to have a marked influence on southern society, they sought to perfect rather than abolish slavery, and egalitarian biracialism gave way to separate worship services, a practice that fueled the development of independent African-American churches following the Civil War.Summary: The orderly society that evangelicals labored to create - one organized around the patriarchal household - unraveled at the end of the Civil War, says Sparks. For whites, evangelicalism became entwined with the Religion of the Lost Cause; for African Americans, the Confederate defeat came as an answered prayer as they began to carve out an autonomous religious life for themselves that would prove to be the bedrock of the African-American community.Summary: This separation of Mississippi's major denominations along racial lines dramatically marked the end of the evangelical movement's first century.
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Circulating Book (checkout times vary with patron status) G. Allen Fleece Library Circulating Collection - First Floor Non-fiction BR1642.U5S63 1994 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available 31923001564117

The growth of a night: discovery and early settlement Gentlemen, is that grammar?: plain folk versus pillared folk, 1805-1830 A Christian sisterhood: white women and the evangelical experience Heirs to the promise: Mississippi blacks, slavery, and the evangelical movement, 1799-1840 No tameness, no satiety: flush times, 1830-1860 Apples of gold in pictures of silver: from sects to denominations, 1830-1860 The lashes of a guilty conscience: evangelical proslavery and slave missions The outside row: the biracial evangelical experience, 1830-1860 A wholesome godly discipline: churches as moral courts, 1806-1870 The desolations of Zion: evangelicals in the Civil War and Reconstruction, 1861-1876.

On Jordan's Stormy Banks is a social history of southern evangelicalism from the late eighteenth century to the end of Reconstruction. By focusing on the three largest evangelical denominations in a single state - Baptist, Methodist, and Presbyterian - Randy J. Sparks charts the rise of evangelicals on the southern frontier and their remarkable increase in numbers, wealth, and influence throughout the remainder of the period.

Beginning as a rebellious movement of the plain folk, evangelicals set themselves up to challenge the social hierarchy and even welcomed slaves into their congregations on terms approaching equality. Although evangelicals had largely abandoned formal opposition to slavery by the time the movement reached Mississippi, their relationship to the institution was complex and conflicted.

Sparks demonstrates that the typical evangelical church was biracial and that the African-American influence in ritual and practice left an indelible imprint on southern religion. The egalitarian nature of these early churches created unique opportunities for women and blacks, and Sparks pays close attention to the important role of the female majority of church members. Similarly, evangelical practice and rhetoric was consciously democratic, linking the movement with republican virtue.

.

By the 1830s, the evangelicals in Mississippi had so prospered that their churches grew from sects to major denominations. This shift to the establishment divided the traditionalists from the modernists within each denomination.

As the evangelicals began to have a marked influence on southern society, they sought to perfect rather than abolish slavery, and egalitarian biracialism gave way to separate worship services, a practice that fueled the development of independent African-American churches following the Civil War.

The orderly society that evangelicals labored to create - one organized around the patriarchal household - unraveled at the end of the Civil War, says Sparks. For whites, evangelicalism became entwined with the Religion of the Lost Cause; for African Americans, the Confederate defeat came as an answered prayer as they began to carve out an autonomous religious life for themselves that would prove to be the bedrock of the African-American community.

This separation of Mississippi's major denominations along racial lines dramatically marked the end of the evangelical movement's first century.

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