支持奴隶制的基督教的起源:白人和黑人福音派在殖民地和战前弗吉尼亚州

C. Irons
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引用次数: 37

摘要

这本书讨论了支持奴隶制争论的福音派根源。在殖民地和南北战争前的南方,黑人和白人福音派教徒经常一起祈祷、唱歌和做礼拜。尽管白人福音派声称与非洲裔有精神上的联系,但他们仍然是基于种族的奴隶制最有效的捍卫者。查尔斯·艾恩斯(Charles Irons)令人信服地指出,白人福音派教徒对奴隶制的看法直接来自于他们与黑人福音派教徒的互动。这本书以弗吉尼亚州为背景,这里是最大的蓄奴州,也是南方福音派运动的中心。这本书从教会记录、宗派报纸、奴隶叙述、私人信件和日记中取材,阐明了福音派内部白人和黑人之间的动态关系。艾恩斯揭示,当白人理论化他们对奴隶的道德责任时,他们首先想到的是他们与自己教会里的奴隶的关系。因此,非裔美国福音派无意中塑造了支持奴隶制的论点的本质。例如,当他们选择加入哪个教会,执行教会纪律的程序,拒绝殖民,或建立准独立的教会时,黑人教徒激励他们的白人教徒进一步发展对奴隶制的宗教辩护。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The Origins of Proslavery Christianity: White and Black Evangelicals in Colonial and Antebellum Virginia
This book deals with the evangelical roots of the proslavery argument. In the colonial and antebellum South, black and white evangelicals frequently prayed, sang, and worshipped together. Even though white evangelicals claimed spiritual fellowship with those of African descent, they nonetheless emerged as the most effective defenders of race-based slavery. As Charles Irons persuasively argues, white evangelicals' ideas about slavery grew directly out of their interactions with black evangelicals. Set in Virginia, the largest slaveholding state and the hearth of the southern evangelical movement, this book draws from church records, denominational newspapers, slave narratives, and private letters and diaries to illuminate the dynamic relationship between whites and blacks within the evangelical fold. Irons reveals that when whites theorized about their moral responsibilities toward slaves, they thought first of their relationships with bondmen in their own churches. Thus, African American evangelicals inadvertently shaped the nature of the proslavery argument. When they chose which churches to join, exercised the procedures set up for church discipline, rejected colonization, or built quasi-independent congregations, for example, black churchgoers spurred their white coreligionists to further develop the religious defense of slavery.
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