Establishment and
Diversity
Religion in America
Church of England
u
Beginnings in Virginia
u
Poor quality of clergy, under Bishop of London
u
Society for the Propagation of the Gospel in Foreign Parts (SPG):
From converting Indians to sustaining Anglicanism
u
Hierarchy and order; elite control vestry
u
By 1750 strong, well-established across the South
African American Religion
u
African religions fail to survive in America
u
Little interest in converting slaves
u
Can Christians be enslaved?
u
The literacy issue
u
Anglicanism does not appeal to most slaves
Unintended Diversity
u
New Amsterdam: Dutch Reformed Church, 1624
u
Jews to New Amsterdam, 1654
u
Sephardic Jews from Spain via Brazil
u
Newport, R.I., 1677
u
Maryland, 1635
u
Refuge for Catholics
u
Religious freedom, 1649-1691
u
Huguenots, 1685
u
South Carolina, New York
Model of Toleration
u
William Penn establishes Pennsylvania, 1681
u
Refuge for Quakers
u
No established church,
no persecution
Pennsylvania Diversity
u Scotch-Irish
Presbyterians along the frontier
u German
Pietist sects immigrate
u
The Moravian brethren
u Personal
relationship with God
u Strict
discipline of moral piety
u Vigorous
evangelizing about need for conversion
u But
Pennsylvania was a disappointment to Quakers
Baptists
u
From out of Separatism
u
Early appearance in Rhode Island: Roger Williams
u
The Great Awakening: spectacular growth
u Emphasis
on conversion & evangelism
u Farmer-preachers,
not educated; no “hireling preachers”
u Discipline:
focus on individual sins (dancing, drinking, etc.)
u
Constant battles with Congregational authorities
u Found
Brown University in Rhode Island, 1764
u
Expansion into the South, 1750s
u
Growth despite violence and persecution in Virginia