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Monday, November 12, 2018

American Church History: Dealing With Multi-cultures


One of the most unique challenges faced by Christians during the colonial years was the internal struggles within the movement itself. Interestingly enough, these struggles were very closely tied to pro/anti American Revolution sentiments. In the North East or what we can call New England territories, there continued to be struggles related to ties to the Church of England. Why would anyone wish to identify with England and its church with the push for liberation? Why sever ties with the people who provided means for a new life? After all, wouldn’t that be the least these new territories could do for the motherland?  Not quite. Aside from economic and political motivations related to the revolution, the North Eastern region became a melting pot of diverse religions and worldviews, pre-dominantly pro-freedom of religious liberties. In Lancaster county, Thomas Barton described the presence of “German Lutherans, Calvinists, Mennonites, New Born, Dunkers, Presbyterians, Seceders, New Lights, Covenanters, Mountain Men, Brownists, Independents, Papists, Quakers, Jews.”[1] Imagine a community in which such diverse religious worldviews are competing for space, influence and converts. 

If there was one common factor in these struggles, it was intolerance on the part of the Church of England/Anglicans of other religions. To make things worse, there was a lingering call for a Anglican bishop to come into the regions to set things straight. This intolerant attitude was antithetical to the New World experiment for which the basis was freedom, exploration and an openness to new ideas and innovations. 
Challenges by Region:
 This in-fighting between the colonialists played out in several ways across the regions: First, those holding anti-Anglican views were seen as opposing the king of England. This resulted in persecution and hostility. Second, Quakers in the Pennsylvania region had a pacifist worldview which influenced their position on taking up arms. This caused the other Protestants to resent them. Christians against Christians. Third, the charter for Maryland given to a Catholic family would prove another example of religious intolerance. Granted, Catholics were being persecuted  back in England, but in the New World, specifically Maryland, the Catholics were looked upon with suspicion and seen as “idolaters.”  In the Carolinas, the Anglicans harassed the French Protestants/Huguenots, rather than welcoming them into the territory. This intolerant attitude towards anything but classical Anglicanism played out across the regions. For example, for his passionate deliver of his style of Anglicanism, George Whitfield was almost excommunicated by one of his own brothers in the gospel (a prejudice of style, delivery and ministry accommodations).  The classical Anglicans then, can be considered exclusivists, to their own later detriment.
Of course, the Christian community faced challenges in intercultural relationships with the native communities and minorities. According to Linford Fisher, in the New England territories (not unlike the other regions), missionary projects were considered failures. In describing the exchange between the Indians and the Puritans, he places the blame at the feet of the Puritans for failed evangelisms due to “cultural insensitivity, political complicity, and financial impropriety…;”  while on the part of the Indians, they are to be “faulted for not grasping the finer points of Christian theology or for persisting in their traditional practices.”[2] In the same way the Anglican approach at ministering to imported labor on plantations and within the communities was lacking until the Methodist and Baptists  engaged that community in a more personal way and opening doors for participation, education and leadership to minorities.  In one sense, the challenges of the religious community in these American territories were self-inflicted. Regardless of the region, challenges should be expected from a melting pot of peoples with diverse religious, political and economic affiliations.



[1]  Edwin S. Gaustad and Leigh E. Schmidt, The Religious History of America, (United States: Harper One, 2004), 93.
[2]  Linford Fisher, “Native Americans, Conversion, and Christian Practice in Colonial New England, 1640-1730,” Harvard Theological Review, Vol. 102 Iss.1 (2009):103, https://search-proquest-com.ezproxy.liberty.edu/docview/229386874/fulltextPDF/1EDE109B65534C8APQ/1?accountid=12085




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