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American originals: homemade varieties of Christianity PDF

712 Pages·1997·1.7 MB·English
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American Originals : Homemade Varieties title: of Christianity author: Conkin, Paul Keith. publisher: University of North Carolina Press isbn10 | asin: 0807823422 print isbn13: 9780807823422 ebook isbn13: 9780807860854 language: English subject Christian sects--United States. publication date: 1997 lcc: BR516.5.C65 1997eb ddc: 280/.0973 subject: Christian sects--United States. Page iii American Originals Homemade Varieties of Christianity Paul K. Conkin THE UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA PRESS/CHAPEL HILL & LONDON Page iv © 1997 The University of North Carolina Press All rights reserved Manufactured in the United States of America The paper in this book meets the guidelines for permanence and durability of the Committee on Production Guidelines for Book Longevity of the Council on Library Resources. Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Conkin, Paul Keith. American originals: homemade varieties of Christianity/Paul K. Conkin. p. cm. Includes index. ISBN 0-8078-2342-2 (cloth: alk. paper) ISBN 0-8078-4649-x (pbk.: alk. paper) I. Christian sects United States. I. Title. BR516.5.C65 1997 280'.0973 dc20 96-35270 CIP 01 00 99 98 97 5 4 3 2 1 Page v Contents Preface vii 1 1 Restoration Christianity Christians and Disciples 2 57 Humanistic Christianity Unitarians and Universalists 3 110 Apocalyptic Christianity Adventists and Jehovah's Witnesses 4 162 Mormon Christianity The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints 5 226 Spiritual Christianity Christian Science and Unity 6 276 Ecstatic Christianity The Holiness and Pentecostal Movements Afterward 316 Index 323 Page vii Preface North America provided special opportunities for religious innovation. In the English colonies and then the United States, plenty of space, the desire for immigration and population growth, and the eventual absence of an established church all combined to provide opportunities for religious prophets and reformers. Some of these broke from the boundaries of Christianity, but none of the new, non- Christian religions ever gained a large following. Because of the heritage of Europeans in America, most religious innovations remained within Christianity, if broadly defined. At the very least, the most successful new prophets or reformers believed that Jesus was the promised Messiah and that in some sense he opened a new path to salvation. To write a book on American originals is to confront all manner of definitional and boundary problems. Every new Christian sect in America had some European progenitors or anticipations, although least so for Mormons and Christian Scientists. Universalists, Unitarians, Adventists, and restorationists all had doctrinal roots in the past or cousins back in Europe. Modern Pentecostals have had counterparts in Britain and elsewhere. Thus, I do not claim that all aspects of any of the religious groups treated in this book were original or peculiarly American. I do believe that they now represent quite distinctive versions of Christianity and that they have a special home in America, however much they borrowed from abroad. My topic is not specific denominations, but distinctive types of Christianity, whether represented in America by only one denomination or by many. Yet even this guideline faces problems, as best illustrated by the present Disciples of Christ. They derive from the broader Restoration Page viii movement, still reflect in doctrine and practice some of the distinctive features of that movement, but have become so ecumenical and have so loosened the bases of separate identity as to be virtually a part of the Christian mainstream. A majority of Unitarian-Universalists no longer claim a Christian identity and thus have moved, or are moving, outside the boundaries of Christianity. The doctrinal divisions within Pentecostalism are deep and perhaps intractable. Some doctrines of the Mormons are so original and so far from any traditional Christianity that many orthodox critics deny their Christian profession. I have not attempted a history of all original forms of Christianity in America, just the largest and most influential. I believe that my six clusters or groupings encompass well over 90 percent of Americans who have embraced new or original forms of Christianity. But the other 10 percent includes several identifiable sects, some very small, some quite bizarre. Yet even tiny sects most often fit within one of my six categories. That is, they are most often distinguished by apocalyptic, spiritualistic, humanistic, restorationist, or ecstatic beliefs and behaviors. Some are fascinating hybrids, such as the Christadelphians, who combine restorationist, Adventist, and Anabaptist doctrines. One communal group, the Shakers, made up (a handful of survivors still make up) a quite original American religion, even though its dominant prophet, Ann Lee, immigrated from England. The doctrines about her, and the unique institutions of the Shakers, were American inventions. The Shakers were unique, not because of their communalism, but because of some doctrines closely tied to it. The Hutterites, the largest communal sect in both the United States and Canada, are, in doctrines and values, model Anabaptists. Their roots are in Europe. So were the doctrines of the Amana Society, the Harmonists, and others. Thus, unlike some other scholars, I do not find, in a community of goods, a proper grouping category for American Christian sects. Neither do I find such in race or ethnicity. This does not mean that Christian movements are exempt from cultural influences. Even within a confessional tradition, the understanding of essential doctrines as well as the nuances of self-expression in iconography and music will vary according to culture. Thus, in ways not always easy to define, Hispanic Catholics in America differ from those of English and Irish derivation. These differences largely reflect the assimilation of aspects of earlier Indian religions. But any religious tradition will reflect cultural influences. In a sense, every expression of Christianity has an ethnic component. These cultural differences are additive to what is essential or definitive in any tradition. Hispanic Catholics, if they adhere to the normative doctrines of the church, are as much Roman Catholics as are Italians. Page ix In the United States, race has some additional dimensions. African Americans derive from many areas of West Africa, each with a different language and religious heritage. In most areas of North America these African peoples were unable to retain their native languages or, in pure form, their traditional religions. In time, particularly in the United States, they had to learn English, but with some retained linguistic elements from the old world, and in time most would convert to various Christian confessions. At times slave owners controlled access and choice, but at times blacks were able to choose the Christian sect they preferred, although again in a context of limited options. Yet, in each case, ranging from Roman Catholicism in Louisiana to evangelical forms of Baptism and Methodism in most of the South, they retained some influences from Africa. To an extent difficult to measure, some African survivals, particularly in patterns of worship, helped shape forms of popular white Christianity. In much of the rural South a merging of religious styles soon blurred the boundaries between blacks and whites, who in most cases worshiped in the same congregations until after emancipation. Blacks eventually joined all denominations, but because of location or culturally influenced preferences, most became Baptists and Methodists in the nineteenth century, while very recently a disproportionate number have joined Pentecostal denominations. In each case, the flavor of black Christianity has been different, but no more reflective of cultural roots than white versions. Black Baptists are as authentically Baptist as whites. It makes good sense to talk about African influences on various Christian confessions in America, but no sense at all to classify black Christians, who are present in every denomination, as constituting a separate form of Christianity, at least so long as one defines a religious tradition in terms of scriptures, doctrines, polities, and moral standards. Many of the major American originals have become world religions

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In a work of striking breadth and clarity, Paul Conkin offers an even-handed and in-depth look at the major American-made forms of Christianity—a diverse group of religious traditions, each of which reflects a significant break from western Christian orthodoxy.Identifying six distinctive types, Co
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