One verse of the Battle Hymn of the Republic, the unofficial
anthem of the Northern cause, summarized the Civil War’s
idealized meaning:
In the beauty of the lilies Christ was born across
the sea,
With a glory in His bosom that transfigures you and me:
As He died to make men holy, let us die to make men free,
While God is marching on. That the war to preserve
the Union had become a godly crusade to end slavery
-- one in which soldiers would “die to make men
free” -- seemed logical and even providential
by 1865. Yet it was an outcome that few in either the
North or South would have predicted at the onset of
hostilities. Before the war, the vast majority of white
Christians in both sections opposed emancipation. A
few years into hostilities, the improbable had become
the inevitable: Abolition, a once-despised cause now
justified the costliest of American wars.
Lincoln’s move toward emancipation and the North’s
assent to that policy must be viewed as an extraordinary
transformation. Undoubtedly, Lincoln’s response
had strategic aims. The president hoped that the Emancipation
Proclamation, issued in 1863, would cajole the South
back into the Union. And certainly Lincoln’s moral
sense had deepened as he watched the mounting death
and destruction. But these explanations of why Lincoln
changed only raise a more profound and elusive question:
How had emancipation itself become a policy option,
albeit a controversial one, when just a few years before
it had been unthinkable?
For this, we must thank the abolitionists. Lincoln said
as much in April 1865, when he credited black freedom
not only to the Union Army but to “the logic and
moral power of William Lloyd Garrison, and the anti-slavery
people of the country.” Always a minority who
despaired at their lack of influence, abolitionists
nonetheless managed over a thirty-year period to widen
the terms of debate over slavery. At the core of their
demand for immediate emancipation and citizenship for
the freed slave lay a special religious vision, one
built upon radical readings of Christianity but rendered
in the mainstream vocabulary of American Protestantism
and civil religion. Abolitionists deemed slavery a sin
at odds with the Christian mission of saving souls and
the progress of humanity promised by the Protestant
Reformation and the American Revolution. To them, the
redemption of America depended upon black freedom.
Most Americans rejected such doctrines as heresy and
condemned their dangerous political and social implications.
Those who opposed the abolitionist doctrine of immediate
emancipation certainly had the Bible and historical
Christianity on their side. As they pointed out, slavery
had existed among the Hebrews without God’s condemnation,
and Jesus had admonished servants to obey their masters
“in singleness of heart, fearing God.” Christianity,
following the tradition of Jewish law, did demand that
masters treat slaves humanely and care for their souls.
Yet never once did Jesus or the Apostles criticize slavery
as an institution. Instead, they promised the rewards
of heaven and resurrection to the faithful, whatever
their status in the world, since each human being possessed
a soul potentially capable of salvation.
In the American colonies, even as nominally Christian
masters rapaciously and sometimes murderously exploited
African slaves, the churches sought not emancipation
but conversion of slaves to Christianity and amelioration
of their conditions. Missionaries taught slaves how
to read the Bible and sought to save their souls (though
masters came to worry about literate bondsmen). Ministers
preached the law of love and campaigned for more humane
treatment, encouraging a Christian ethic of paternalism
for the master and protection for his chattel. These
efforts helped to humanize the rough frontiers of North
America and for a time seemed to fulfill Christian duty
to those Africans wrested from their homes and transported
to the New World.
Doubts about the wisdom and morality of owning slaves,
however, emerged in Europe and North America in the
late seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. Sources as
disparate as fear of labor competition, racial animosity,
Enlightenment notions of liberty and labor, as well
as radical Christian visions of spiritual freedom combined
to inspire principled cases against slavery in general.
George Fox and John Woolman, both Quakers, as well as
the Puritan minister, Samuel Sewell, voiced some of
the first religious objections to the institution. Yet
only when such radical notions of spiritual equality
fused with the American Revolution’s radical republicanism
did the dream of an American continent free of slavery
begin to take shape in earnest.
The Revolutionary era witnessed major reforms, including
gradual emancipation of slaves in the Northern states
and, in cooperation with Britain, a ban on the African
slave trade in 1808. Major church bodies condemned slave
keeping as, in the words of the Presbyterian General
Assembly of 1818, a “gross violation of the most
precious and sacred rights of nature” and “utterly
inconsistent with the law of God.” Nonetheless,
the Constitution structured slavery into the nation’s
political system through the three-fifths compromise,
and slave labor fast became the backbone of a vigorous
Southern economy. Churchly criticism of the institution
soon moderated. Southern clergymen and religious communities
(as well as a great many of their Northern counterparts)
were moved enough by the excesses of the system to work
out a compromise. They came to see slavery as “not
a beautiful thing, a thing to be espoused and idolized,
but the best attainable thing, in this country, for
the negro.” “We must leave it for God to
remove, when his time comes,” declared one writer
in the Southern Presbyterian Review. “It
is ours to do the duties of intelligent, decided, fearless,
conscientious Christian masters.”
Yet the presence of slaves in America continued to bother
a number of ministers and laypersons, and not only because
of the anomaly of bondage in republican America. These
Americans feared African Americans themselves, slave
or free, as a troublesome and degraded presence. Whether
blaming blacks or the whites who despised them, a variety
of reformers offered the colonization of American blacks
in Africa as a solution. The American Colonization Society,
founded in 1816, appeared to offer something for everyone.
Free blacks would receive land and a fresh start in
the colony of Liberia, unhindered by white prejudice;
evangelicals could open a new front in the campaign
to Christianize Africa with black émigré
missionaries in the lead; and white America, simply
put, would be rid of what was widely regarded as a foreign
and malignant population. On paper, colonization created
a solution to the problem of racial tension that was
both Christian and sensible. But in its compromises
and self-delusion, the colonization movement, which
had an almost total lack of success, also illustrated
the degree to which most professing Christians had in
reality accommodated themselves to slavery’s enduring
presence in American society.
The first third of the nineteenth century, however,
was a significant time for antislavery. Haitian slaves
had risen up and freed themselves from French rule in
1803. In England, decades of antislavery agitation led
Parliament to abolish slavery in the British Empire
by 1834. In the United States, sectional friction related
to slavery began in earnest with the Missouri crisis
of 1820. Nor were black voices silent. Free African
American ministers sermonized against slavery’s
cruelties. Periodic fears of slave violence came to
a head in 1822 with the discovery of Denmark Vesey’s
planned slave uprising. And in 1829, a free black man,
David Walker of Boston, struck fear in the hearts of
Southerners by distributing his Appeal. With
an urgent prophecy of divine punishment in the form
of race war if America did not give up slavery and race
prejudice and with undisguised disgust at the hypocrisy
of Americans who claimed to espouse doctrines of freedom,
the Appeal called upon blacks to demand liberty.
All these factors caused a few whites to begin to renew
the spiritual struggle against slavery. The Reverend
George Bourne, an Englishman who headed a Presbyterian
congregation in Virginia, refused communion to slaveholders
and excoriated slaveholding ministers. In 1816 Bourne
published a landmark tract, The Book and Slavery
Irreconcilable. It called for "immediate emancipation"
and labeled slavery as “manstealing.” The
Quaker tradition of antislavery continued in the work
of Benjamin Lundy, whose periodical, The Genius
of Universal Emancipation, sought to allay white
fears and misconceptions about blacks. Lundy hoped that
God would effect a “gradual spread of reason and
the consequent elimination of racial prejudice”
that would help end slavery.
It was in these circumstances of the late 1820s that
William Lloyd Garrison applied the rhetoric of evangelical
reform to slavery and put forth the vision of America
at a crossroads, one in which it must free the slaves
immediately or suffer God’s wrath in the form
of race war. Once a proponent of colonization, Garrison
now rejected that program as a disastrous moral drug
that numbed Christians to reality. He took the arguments
of marginal figures like Walker, Bourne, and Lundy and
gave them the authoritative voice of mainstream evangelical
religion. He began publishing The Liberator
on January 1, 1831, and pressed home the need for black
freedom: “Tell a man whose house is on fire to
give a moderate alarm…but urge me not to use moderation
in a cause like the present.” The cadences of
the publication replicated the heightened rhetoric of
the temperance and Sabbatarian movements but moved to
radical ground merging apocalyptic visions with the
familiar religious language of conversion and reform.
Reactions to Garrison varied. For whites in the South
he became a hated enemy, while free blacks in the North
applauded his efforts and became his most reliable subscribers.
Most evangelicals rejected his tone as unchristian and
his program as impractical and dangerous. However, Garrison
galvanized a small minority in the religious community,
especially those who had already begun to question the
morality of slavery. He converted them to the cause
and united them under the banner of a new organization,
the American Antislavery Society. In his insistence
on the need to choose between national millennial splendor
through immediate emancipation and divine wrath brought
about through inaction, Garrison’s followers found
a bracing clarity that was a form of religious experience.
For a significant vocal minority, immediate emancipation
became not simply an option but the ultimate standard
of the Christian life.
These converts to the radical idea of emancipation demanded
attention. They sought additional converts in local
churches and agitated the issue in national ecclesiastical
bodies. Meanwhile, across the North many abolitionists
deemed their churches impure and left them in favor
of new congregations or none at all. In the face of
churchly inaction on slavery, Garrison and a good many
others moved toward new, radical visions of the religious
life, which bore little relationship to the evangelical
or other traditions that had originally imbued these
reformers with religious fervor. In this sense, even
as abolitionism found its first burst of power in the
forms of traditional Christianity, its disappointments
with the religious establishment hastened a splintering
of the religious community that was to shape American
church life in the century after the Civil War.
By the early 1840s, it is true, deep fissures had appeared
in the abolitionist movement. The fault lines included
the issue of participation in electoral politics, advocacy
of a broader reform program, personality conflicts,
and race itself. However, all could agree on -- and
help to make commonplace -- the idea that the question
of slavery involved the very survival of the American
experiment and its place in millennial history. Abolitionism’s
disruption of the mainstream churches helped to legitimize
immediate emancipation both as a policy to be debated
and as a perspective that was seen as an extreme but
recognized part of the Christian vision and political
spectrum.
As other issues, such as slavery’s expansion into
the territories and the fear of a slaveholder conspiracy
to rule the nation, sharpened the sectional divide,
abolitionism and its vocabulary of freedom and race
toleration gained basic legitimacy. Although most white
Americans still saw abolition as a threat to the carefully
balanced peace between Northerners and Southerners,
and between blacks and whites, abolitionists had made
emancipation a part of the nation’s moral imagination.
With the coming of war, no vision of Christian sacrifice
better suited the time than a moral crusade to free
the slave.
| For a list
of books and websites covering the relationship
between religion and abolitionism, visit our
Additional
Resources Page |
|
|