Mississippi Praying: Southern White Evangelicals and the Civil Rights Movement, 1945-1975

Mississippi Praying: Southern White Evangelicals and the Civil Rights Movement, 1945-1975

by Carolyn Renée Dupont
Mississippi Praying: Southern White Evangelicals and the Civil Rights Movement, 1945-1975

Mississippi Praying: Southern White Evangelicals and the Civil Rights Movement, 1945-1975

by Carolyn Renée Dupont

Hardcover(New Edition)

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Overview

Winner of the 2013 Frank S. and Elizabeth D. Brewer Prize presented by the American Society of Church History


Mississippi Praying examines the faith communities at ground-zero of the racial revolution that rocked America. This religious history of white Mississippians in the civil rights era shows how Mississippians’ intense religious commitments played critical, rather than incidental, roles in their response to the movement for black equality.


During the civil rights movement and since, it has perplexed many Americans that unabashedly Christian Mississippi could also unapologetically oppress its black population. Yet, as Carolyn Renée Dupont richly details, white southerners’ evangelical religion gave them no conceptual tools for understanding segregation as a moral evil, and many believed that God had ordained the racial hierarchy.


Challenging previous scholarship that depicts southern religious support for segregation as weak, Dupont shows how people of faith in Mississippi rejected the religious argument for black equality and actively supported the effort to thwart the civil rights movement. At the same time, faith motivated a small number of white Mississippians to challenge the methods and tactics of do-or-die segregationists. Racial turmoil profoundly destabilized Mississippi’s religious communities and turned them into battlegrounds over the issue of black equality. Though Mississippi’s evangelicals lost the battle to preserve segregation, they won important struggles to preserve the theology that had sustained the racial hierarchy. Ultimately, this history sheds light on the eventual rise of the religious right by elaborating the connections between the pre- and post-civil rights South.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780814708415
Publisher: New York University Press
Publication date: 08/23/2013
Edition description: New Edition
Pages: 303
Product dimensions: 7.40(w) x 9.10(h) x 1.30(d)

About the Author

Carolyn Renée Dupont is Assistant Professor of History at Eastern Kentucky Universityin Richmond, KY.

Table of Contents

Contents
List of Illustrations ix
Acknowledgments xi
Introduction: History, White Religion, and 1
the Civil Rights Movement
1 Segregation and the Religious Worlds of White Mississippians 15
2 Conversations about Race in the Post-War World 39
3 Responding to Brown: The Recalcitrant Parish 63
4 “A Strange and Serious Christian Heresy”:
Massive Resistance and the Religious Defense of Segregation 79
5 “Ask for the Old Paths”:
Mississippi’s Southern Baptists and Segregation 105
6 “Born of Conviction”:
The Travail of Mississippi Methodism 127
7 The Jackson Church Visits:
“A Good Quarter-Time Church with a Bird Dog and Shotgun” 155
8 “Warped and Distorted Reflections”: 181
Mississippi and the North
9 Race and the Restructuring of American Religion 199
Conclusion: A Theology on the Wrong Side of History 231
Notes 241
Index 285
About the Author 290
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