Team 7 Question 3

  1. Gonzalez describes the period of slavery as a time of confusion and rebellion within different denominations of the church. Due to a wide spread disagreement on slavery many denominations broke from each other and only the Catholic Church came out unscathed. Simply, people disagreed on whether or not it was ok to own slaves  from a biblical standpoint. Some denominations of Christianity banned slavery like the American Methodists who banned slaveholding among its members. Many Methodists in fact took a stand against slavery. However, Methodists and Baptists alike were trying to attract more numbers to grow their congregations. They both changed their stances on slavery. Some denominations were confused on how to act, the General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church declared slavery as going against God’s will and yet didn’t want slavery to be abolished. This seemed to be a contradiction. How could a congregation say that slavery went against God and yet they didn’t want to see it be abolished in the U.S.  Soon in the South preachers were telling their congregations that slavery was necessary due to it helping the U.S. agriculturally and that slaveholders were freeing blacks from their uneducated and barbaric homes countries. The Methodist Church split due to this dispute. Then the Civil War began.  During this time both preachers in the North and South defended their sides using biblical scriptures. After the war ended resentment was still alive and well. Then Jim Crowe laws started springing and blacks became separate but not equal. This gave rise to the Black Baptists. After the Civil War black churches started to spring up everywhere and this led to the church becoming a pivotal part of the black communities. Ultimately there was a lot of dispute and confusion within the church on whether or not people should own slaves. This dispute led to many churches splitting up, and forming new communities. After the slaves were set free the Church became an integral part within black communities. Although Jim Crow laws were in effect the church gave people a place to come and worship freely.
  2. In Truth’s speech she defends the right of women saying that she has worked, toiled, eaten, and has drunk as much as any man. She is as good as any man because she has plowed the fields by herself, nobody has been there to help her. She gave birth to 13 children and no man was there to help her. Nobody treats her with respect except for Jesus Christ. The only man that has treated her with and kind of respect was Jesus and then she goes on to say that women are just as equal to man because Christ came from God and Mary. There was no man involved. Joseph was not involved in the conception. She finally points out that if Eve was strong willed enough to turn the world upside down then any women is strong enough to correct the wrongs in this world. She brings out the point that women are just as capable as men, that Christ came from God and Mary, and finally that women are powerful you just need to look at Eve to find that truth.
  3. Douglas makes the comparison that the United States is like Judah. America has taken slaves and they will be punished for it. He says that the people of the United States take pleasure in slavery. That Americans rejoiced in the fact that they are becoming wealthy off of the work of slaves. He is saying that the people of the United States cannot forget the cries of Jerusalem when they were in captivity. The cries to God asking to be rid of the chains that they possessed. The black slaves in the United States just like the salves in Jerusalem are yearning to be free of their chains. How could the United States act just as Jerusalem’s captors did? Douglas then uses the Declaration of Independence to argue for man’s ownership of their own body. That within the Declaration of Independence man has a right to their own body, they have a right to be free, they have a right to seek their own future. Douglas argues that there isn’t a man alive that could not know that slavery is a wrong practice, and that it is flat out going against the will of God. Douglas even goes as far to say “What, to the American slave, is your 4th of July?” He is saying that Americans hail the 4th of July as Independence day, a day where they were free from the rule of British oppression and yet to the American slave it is just another date. It has no bearing for them because although they are in America they are not free from their oppressors. To the American slave the 4th of July is a faux holiday and is only an example of America’s arrogance. Looking at the verses Isa 59:1 says that the Lord will save all people. The Lord’s arm extends to all people who are being punished and those people will be saved. Genesis 1:3 shows the omnipotence of God. Lev 25:10 states that jubilee in the past has set slaves free and annulled all debt. :13 again shows Jubilee and :18 says to obey God’s laws in order to live in peace and harmony. Isa 58:6 God is saying that he has set people free, he has lifted the chains of injustice, freed people from their injustices, and broken off the yoke of slavery in the past and Douglas is alluding that America should do the same. Isa 61:1-2 Isaiah is saying that God has sent him to free the people from captivity, bind up the brokenhearted, and release the prisoners from darkness. Douglas is alluding that is Isaiah one of the greatest prophets set slaves free then truly the U.S. must recognize and respect the precedent set by Isaiah. Luke 4:18-19 is from Christ’s stand point saying that like Isaiah Christ has come to set people free, proclaim that the Lord is God, proclaim the Gospel, and free the prisoners from their sin. Douglas alludes to this because Jesus the Son of God set slaves free and freed them from their bonds. If the Son of God did this, then the U.S. must then recognize that slavery is wrong. All of these versus are strategically used to show that God has freed slaves in the past, lifted their burdens, and let slaves become free men. Douglas urges that the U.S. should do the same. He urges the U.S. to mirror both God and Christ’s judgement to free people from slavery.

Team 2, Question 1

The Second Great Awakening was extraordinary time in the Protestant movement full of emotion, devotion and conversion. It started out in New England and wasn’t sparked by anti-intellectual connotations like other movements, catching the attention of some of the biggest theologians of this time. It was branded by engulfing oneself in the ideas of Jesus, the notion of loving your neighbor which would come under fire later. One of the key characteristics was individualism, individuals working towards a better more personal relationship with Christ. In the text it discussed how many societies formed at this time with the goal of making the gospel well known. Gonzales discusses in more detail about these societies, “American Bible Society, founded in 1816, and the American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions, founded six years earlier. The latter was the result of a covenant made by a group of students meeting on a haystack, who vowed to devote themselves to foreign missions” (Gonzales). These mission trips were focused many things like social causes such as slavery, women, and the spreading of the gospel to insure everybody had the opportunity to live their life as Jesus did. As touched on briefly above Women were a key characteristic, playing a big role in this period. The rate of conversions was the highest amongst women, women were creating societies and leading the charge amongst many social issues. The characteristic of individualism and its effect on women played a huge role in the placement of The Second Great Awakening in history.

Charles Finney has a stern personality that cast a large amount of judgment on mankind. He says that “religion is the work of man. It is something for man to do. It consists in obeying God with and from the heart. It is man’s duty” (Placher). Finney is judging man of all these, human nature, humanity’s normal relationship with God, and the mainstream efforts by churches to bring people to God. He judges and criticizes man because of the fact that man gets caught up in the scripture, interpreting and preaching to many people creating revival after revival causing “man” to really lose touch with God. God did not create man to go out and revive, revive, and revive, as Finney states “God is a sovereign, and it is very wrong for you to attempt to get up a revival, just because you think a revival is needed” (Placher).  He goes on to back revivalism in how it should be. If God wants to revive anything he will do it and he will pick somebody to carry out that act but its not going to be everybody and its not going to be a trend amongst men. This sums up Finney, he is degusted with man’s obsession of forming their own opinions, bringing people to God with that opinion, and forming these revivals because to him man must obey God and work towards God not be selfish and work against God.

Team 1, Question 1

The Second Great Awakening was a movement that shot more individualistic consciousness into the minds of church goers. It occurred at the end of the seventeenth century and it started in New England. It was characterized by community and entrenched in the basics of Jesus’ teaching of “loving thy neighbor”. There was influence coming from the diversity of individuals immigrating into the United States, on the fact that the boarders surrounding North America were still in flux. The war with Mexico in 1829 caused much death and destruction amongst the people of Mexico and North America.  There are many aspects that play into the entirety of the movement but there are some characteristics that stick out. One namely is the animalistic way that the Shakers would conduct worship, “…some wept and others laughed uncontrollably, still others trembled, and some ran about, and some even barked” (González 327). This newer sect transcends, yet still has remnants of the Quakers. In the sense that the physical manifestation of the Spirit literally moves ones body. The Cane Ridge Revival of 1801 was an event that occurred and was supported by a Presbyterian pastor in Kentucky. The space where the people associated with the revival congregated was one of freedom and clarity. The Shakers worship traditions are associated with dancing and moving about.

The term Manifest Destiny is based in the war between North America and Mexico. At the time the boarders were in flux and Mexico had outlawed slavery (1829). Thus creating an inflow of immigrants which dove tails the ethical, cultural, and religious diversity that was so prevalent during the Second Great Awakening.

Finley sees that “men” are on this earth to obey the rules of God and its natural order but also criticizes man for being dazed in their consciousness for following the constructs of religious scripture. He uses a Biblical parable as commentary on the teaching of Scripture in the common space of society “Suppose a man were to go and preach this doctrine among farmer, about their doing grain” (Finney). He approaches the absurdity of following a doctrine by playfully adopting the scriptural image of The Parable of the Sewer (Mathew 13). In terms of revivalism sf its need in society. Finley sees that it is damning, he believes it is the devils work. It is the devils work to preach a doctrine in order to encompass the minds of individuals.

Team 4, Question 2

The Shaker’s official name is The United Society of Believer’s in Christ’s Second Appearing, lead by Ann Lee Stanley, or Mother Ann. Stanley received revelations from God leading her to believe she was the second coming of Christ in female form. Since he had come previously as a man, and in keeping with their “dualism” belief in nature, the Shakers accepted that his second coming would be as a woman. Though they lived communally, Shaker beliefs required they “abstain from sex, which is the root of all evil” (Gonzalez 326). The Shakers believed the end of the world was at hand and that the Kingdom of Heaven was to be established on Earth, causing the downfall of the antichrist. Shakers were persecuted throughout England for their Spiritualistic beliefs. Mother Ann received visions from God telling her to build a society in America, where the Second Christian Church would be, and that the colonies were to gain their independence, letting the Shakers “worship without hindrance or molestation” (Setzer and Shefferman 224).

The Shaker’s belief in Mother Ann being the second coming of Christ lead to their many apocalyptic beliefs. In the Gospel there is a “fourth and last great cycle” which would be the “time for ‘the restitution of all things, which God had spoken by the mouth of all his prophets” (Setzer and Shefferman). Because Ann Lee Stanley received visions from God, thus making her a prophet, the apocalypse was predicted.

William Miller was raised as an American Baptist in New York. As a student of the Bible, he believed in deism as a young adult, but eventually returned to “views of a providential God” after his “survival at the Battle of Plattsburgh” (Setzer and Shefferman 227). Miller used the Bible, in particular the recordings of Daniel and John, to calculate the “passing of a 2,300-year period before the return of Christ”, identifying 1843 as the year of the apocalypse (Setzer and Shefferman 227).

Miller considered the prophecy he had calculated to be “somewhat different than other parts of Scripture” since these beliefs were shared amongst several different Biblical prophets. He cites numerous passages in the Bible that seem to echo each other, including Revelations 18:7, Daniel 12:1, and the Gospel of Matthew, “For then shall be great tribulation, such as was not since the beginning of the world to this time, no, nor ever shall be.” (KJV Matthew 24:21) All of these verses seemed to point toward the second coming of Christ. Because the first coming was so well predcted, he believed that since the Bible pointed to a second coming it made sense to follow the Biblical prophecies for his second coming. Miller shared his discovery so that every individual would “be prepared that that day may not come upon them unawares (238).

Ellen G. White was an “Adventist” and disciple of Miller. Despite the day he had predicted the Kingdom of God to arrive on Earth passing without incident, White and several others believed the “Second Advent was still at hand… and the process had been set in motion in 1844” (229). White began having visions, convincing her of the time and place of the Second Advent of Christ. She was a founder of the Seventh Day Adventist Church, and explained her vision for Christian education in her book The Book of Books, “the study of the Bible will give strength to the intellect” and “without the Bible we should have been left to conjectures and fables in regard to the occurance of past ages” (230). White and the Adventists believed that without the guidance of the Bible, worshipers would have no idea of when the Second Coming was to occur. She also wrote that if the Bible were applied in everyday life those who studied it would bebrought up from “earthliness and debasement”, ensuring they would not be lead into temptation and sin (230). If people were to meditate on God they would receive a strengthening off their spirit. God would not accept those who belittled him into Heaven. By studying and implementing the Bible, worshipers would be able to enter Heaven. White quotes Revelations 22:12-14 as proof that through belief and study of the Bible, believers would be allowed to enter Heaven.

Team 5, Question 3

As the founding of the new American nation approached, many believed that it should be free from the sinful institution of slavery. In 1776, the Quakers expelled anyone who owned slaves. Other denominations held similar views, but they did not stick until later in the 19th century, as such thoughts were quelled in favor of presenting Britain with a united front. By the middle of the 1800s, anti-slavery sentiments were boiling to the top of Christian American thoughts again. In 1844, the Methodist church split over the Bishop of Georgia owning slaves, and the Methodist Episcopal Church, South, was formed. The Southern Baptist Convention was created after similar circumstances. The Presbyterian church split during the Civil War in 1861. Christians on both side of the war preached in favor of their side. Following the Union victory, the white Southern population was held subservient to the North, and anger stemming from this was redirected towards the resident black population. The Ku Klux Klan was born from this resentment and was supported by many white southern Christians.

Feeling alienated from their former congregations, many freed slaves broke away and formed their own denominations. Churches such as the Colored Methodist Episcopal Church were formed, as were the African Methodist Episcopal and the African Methodist Episcopal Zion in the North. Following the reconstruction, these churches formed an indispensable core of black society, as the black population was restricted from other prestigious positions. Most black leaders of the era were also ministers to their congregations.

Sojourner Truth was a former slave and activist. In her speech ‘Ain’t I a woman?’, she speaks for women’s rights by using herself as an example. She needs no special treatment. She is as strong as a man and can work as hard. She also counters a man’s argument – a that Jesus was not a woman therefore women deserve less rights – by explaining that Jesus was made from God and from a woman. The Son of God had nothing to do with men.

Frederick Douglass calls out the entire nation in a speech the day after the 4th of July, 1852. He says, “This Fourth July is yours, not mine” (Douglass 1). Douglass says that the nation was founded on liberty and independence, but that those things are not extended to him. The principles the founders envisioned were not being upheld by the current generations. He references the fall of Judah, which was allowed to be conquered by Babylon because they did not follow God’s will. This is a not-so-subtle call to look upon America’s actions and change for the betterment of all society. At the end of his speech, Douglass references several biblical passages, hoping for the end of tyranny and oppression, the end of violence, and pledges to keep fighting for that day.

Team 6, Question 3: Truth & Douglass

As North American colonists took on the fight for independence from Britain, it was crucial to present a united front. Therefore, while many held views in opposition to the prevalent practice of slavery, the issue was kept quiet and took a back seat to independence efforts. Some Christian denominations were actively against slavery and took active measures to eliminate it from the church, however, as time went on, many of those same denominations relaxed their stance in order to draw wealthy white Southerners to their congregations. What perhaps began as appeasement soon turned into approval, and sermons could be heard on Sunday morning in favor of slavery as “an institution sanctioned by God,” (Gonzalez, 333). An familiar attitude of white Protestant superiority sprung up, claiming that slavery was even beneficial to blacks as it had allowed them the opportunity to be evangelized and saved from their previous pagan nation. It is interesting to note a common thread amongst white Christians who claimed that the aggressive American conquest of the Mexican land in the southwest was actually a door opened by God so the Mexicans could be saved through evangelism (Gonzalez 331).

Certainly some denominations held to an anti-slavery stance, notably the Quakers and some Methodists and Baptists (who ended up splitting due to the controversial issue). Denominational splits were not surprising against a backdrop of the national split that was taking place over the same matter. Civil war, reconstruction, and the Supreme Court approval of segregation added complexity and tension to racial divide. Blacks began to set up their own churches separate from the whites, and while most white American Christians founded their core beliefs on the idea of liberty and individual rights, these principles were withheld from a significant portion of the population. Excluded and oppressed in practice by those who yet confessed beliefs in the same God, blacks found solidarity and a sense of dignity within their churches. Voices from this community began to speak out against the contradiction and hypocrisy that was evident in the church and nation regarding human rights.

Sojourner Truth’s compelling speech, “Ain’t I a Woman?” was delivered in 1851 at a women’s rights conference. Her perspective as a black, former-slave, Christian woman demonstrated the absurdity of inequality in race and gender. Truth argues for blacks and black women in particular, by recalling her own strength, abilities and humanity in ploughing, planting, bearing children, and grieving the loss of those children to the horror of continued slavery. Truth then simply picked apart common so-called Biblical arguments for the inferiority of women. So what if Jesus was a man? He came from God and woman, and “man had nothing to do with him,” Truth argues. Moreover, if Eve (from the Genesis story of the fall of creation) could single-handedly “turn the wold upside down,” then surely all the women fighting for their rights now could together make the world right again. While Truth says intellect has nothing to do with rights, she certainly makes her case through reason, exposing the holes in Christian arguments that result in oppression, by laying out plainly the rationality and superiority of Christian love and care.

A year later, Frederick Douglass delivered a speech entitled, “The Meaning of July Fourth for the Negro,” and compellingly argued the injustices birthed in the midst of a new, liberated nation. This criticism calls to mind that of John Wesley who had criticized the colonists for “claiming freedom for themselves at the same time that they denied it to their slaves,” (Gonzalez, 322). With eloquence, Douglass alludes to the destruction of the kingdom of Judah when he quotes Psalm 137. The illustration depicts a captive people, far from home, tormented and distraught – clearly meant to parallel the suffering Israelites in Babylon with the American slavery blacks had endured. Douglass calls America’s “boasted liberty, an unholy license” and “shouts of liberty and equality, hollow mockery,” (Douglass, 3). By using language from the Declaration of Independence he paints a stark contrast to the reality of the nation, and challenges the oppressive (or empty) use of religion and sermons as fraud and impiety. Despite all of this, Douglass ends his speech on a hopeful note, declaring that the light of knowledge, unity and liberty are drawing where no abuse can hide. By drawing upon multiple biblical passages, the notion of jubilee demonstrates Douglass’ hope for the future. God’s arm is not too short to save (Isaiah 59:1), his voice commands action (Genesis 1:3), there shall be liberty for every person (Leviticus 25:10) and injustice and oppression will be undone (Isaiah 58:6).

Team 3, Question 2 for class on 4/28

The Shakers believed in the “dual” nature of life and as a result, thought the Second Coming of Christ would involve Jesus in female form (Setzer and Shefferman, 221). This is why apocalypticism arose in the United Society of Believers, and when a young woman named Ann Lee started to receive visions in 1770, they thought she was the coming Messiah. They believed in the idea of a cyclic nature of history, and thought that once the “culminating point of Spiritualism has been reached,” a new “Church of God” forms for that cycle of time (four of these periods were said to have occurred) (Evans, 222). The Shaker church is the result of the spiritual part of the fourth and final cycle, characterized by the “restitution of all things” and the Second Coming. The formation of Shaker societies arises from a “general agitation of spiritual elements” and a subsequent “movement of the religious elements in man” (Evans, 223). The spiritual faculties in man have been “aroused” and spiritualism has laid the groundwork for the joining of the natural and spiritual worlds (Evans, 223). They called for people to be saved in proclaiming the second appearance of Christ, and just like the Mullerites, claimed the apocalypse was happening, and a new society would be created. The Shakers believed themselves to be fulfilling all of world history, and connected their movement with historical cycles including the rise of a new church. They cite “proper historical data” that confirms their place in the spiritual and historical history of the world (Evans, 223). While they don’t give any solid evidence (Deists would be appalled), the Shakers position their church as the natural extension of spiritual order.

William Miller, a former Baptist, believed scriptural prophecy was knowable and actually happened/happens. His method of biblical interpretation led him to conclude that 1843 was the year the return of Christ, restoration of Jerusalem, and the kingdom of God would all take place. He believed all of the prophecies in scripture can be attributed to different authors writing in different time periods and geographical areas, but all agree and confirm each other (Miller, 227). He states that the biblical student should bring all relevant pieces of scripture together and “let every word have its own Scripture meaning;” if one does this, his/hers theory is correct (Miller, 228). Miller posits that all prophecy centers on the first and second coming of Christ. He concludes that Christ will come in 1843, the conclusion of a 2300 year period, evidence for which Miller pieced together from scripture. He encourages his audience to study scripture, set aside their prejudices, and believe in God so they may be saved and gain admittance into the New Jerusalem.

Ellen White, the founder of the Seventh Day Adventist (SDA) Church, concurred with Miller, but only went as far as saying the process of the apocalypse had only begun in 1844. She too advocated for biblical study, and claimed the Bible is the ultimate tool (“Book of books”) for understanding the world, from moral instruction to universal wonders to God himself; it is the ultimate source of truth (White, 230). She says that when people disregard the Bible, Satan springs up and does evil things, taking advantage of the situation to strip people away from God. She even goes as far as saying that God simply does not accept those who “[belittle] his powers” and only composes Heaven with “spiritualized” people (White, 230). Those who “cherish pride” and “[contemplate] sin” are “unfitted for moral advancement” and cannot fully understand the truth (White, 231). If one studies the Bible, they are blessed by God and “may enter in through the gates” into Heaven (White, 231).

The Shakers, Miller, and White all supported rigorous spiritual study, which they believed led believers to the truth and into Heaven. Likewise, all of these parties envisioned themselves as part of the immediate, apocalyptic fulfillment of scripture and coming of the new heavenly society.

Team 5, Question 2

In Jefferson’s idea society, reason and free inquiry are used as “effectual agents against error” (160). He believes that by using reason and free inquiry, all false beliefs will be removed from society. To fully remove false beliefs, all facets of government must allow free inquiry. When the Roman government followed such a structure, Christianity was introduced to the empire. Because false beliefs had been removed, the society was able to accept Christianity and use it to build a better empire and society. Jefferson warns of uniformity and it’s devastating effects throughout history. He believes that differing opinions will help society and is actually advantageous to religion. Free inquiry must be promoted so that reason will naturally follow and with both in place, citizen’s right will be protected and the government will be fully free of false beliefs.

When writing to Benjamin Rush, Jefferson describes himself to be a true Christian, meaning that he is “sincerely attached to his doctrines” (163). To Jefferson, conscious was the most important and central teaching to Christianity. He refers to the false forms of Christianity to be myth based and praises all human excellence. When Jefferson compares Greco-Roman philosophers, Jews, and Christianity, he creates his syllabus. He finds the philosophers to be too inwardly focused. Their teachings are almost to the point of his understanding but destroy the tranquilities of one’s mind by being so unrestrained. The philosopher’s teachings lack the empathy that Jesus’ had. When analyzing the Jews, Jefferson finds that although they follow deism in the sense that they are monotheistic, they lack the understanding of a benevolent and caring God. Jesus was sent to teach the Jews a loving and humbling message of loving thy neighbor. This is how Jefferson also views Jesus, as a teacher. Although Jesus did not possess a full lifetime of morals, Jefferson views his as the most perfect. Because the Jew’s lacked the teachings of Jesus, theirs was not a wholly just society. By applying those teachings and using them authoritatively, a just society could be created and thus creating a doctrine that all future just societies could follow.

Jefferson’s views of equality and liberty within his writings reveal an enlightenment-influenced view of religion and Christianity. In his Notes on Virginia and his letter to Benjamin Rush, he encourages a government that seeks input and criticism to better itself. For this to happen, free inquiry must be utilized to its full extent. He promotes the separation of church and state and sites examples of its success in sustaining peace and order. Enlightenment thinking emphasizes having a personal relationship with God and is echoed in Jefferson’s belief that people should not be forced into finding their truths. He believes Christianity to be his true faith but understands the notion that people need to find their own truths. Jefferson fully promotes free inquiry and the positive influence it has on government and religion.

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