Sunday, February 25, 2007

Evangelicalism, abolition and slavery.

The theocratically inclined World Net Daily web site is promoting the film Amazing Grace, as to be expected with their Christianist agenda. Their “film reviewer” writes that this is the story of Wilberforce who lost his father and went to live with an aunt “in whose home he first met the great evangelist George Whitefield, and John Newton. Newton had converted to Christianity and left a lucrative life as a slave trader, and wrote the words of the hymn Amazing Grace."

Anschutz’s film also tells the story of John Newton, the man who authored the song Amazing Grace because Newton was a covert to Christianity and had once been an active merchant in slaves himself. I’ve not seen the film so I can’t say how accurate it is on this matter. I can, however say, that the web site for the film merely claims that Newton repented "over time" but gives no indication of the time involved. Newton’s conversion to Christianity was real. He was on a ship that he thought would sink during a storm and prayed that God would save the ship. When it didn’t sink, and most ships don’t sink during storms, Newton changed his life.

But when I say he changed his life he stopped swearing, he stopped gambling (so he wouldn’t be at Anschutz’s casino) and he stopped drinking. What he didn’t do was stop working in the slave trade. That continued for several more years. Then he had a violent fever and got converted all over again. This time he said it was total conversion and he was at peace. And still he continued working in the slave trade. Trading in human beings didn’t disturb his peace at all. Apparently having a beer was a problem, as was saying “damn” but helping transport human slaves didn’t bother him and if it did then it didn’t bother him enough to stop.

Only in 1754, six years after his conversion, did he retire from the maritime industry but not in moral revulsion against slavery but because he wanted to become an Anglican priest. One has to wonder how many more additional people were sold into slavery because the converted Newton found nothing in his evangelicalism that opposed slavery.

For seven years Newton was rejected for the priesthood. He also tried to be ordained by the Methodists, Presbyterians and others but no one was that keen. He eventually used the influence of a friend and was ordained. It was only in 1779 that Newton ended up in London preaching and it was here he met William Wilberforce, the main character in the Anschutz film.

And it was only now that Newton became an abolitionist. He was a Christian and a slave trader for years. Only after he left the maritime trade, and decades later, did he find himself opposing slavery. He wrote a booklet against slavery in 1787, 33 years after he left the slave trading enterprise. His conversions to Christianity did not stop him from engaging in the transport of slaves whatsoever.

And what of the other prominent “evangelical” influence on Wilberforce: George Whitefield? Whitefield is certainly a far more important figure in the development of evangelicalism than Wilberforce. Whitefield is the man who is often credited with bringing revivalist fundamentalism to America. He toured the American colonies preaching the message of fundamentalist Christianity winning many converts. His campaign was called “The Great Awakening” but what is forgotten, or ignored, is that Whitefield didn’t just support slavery he actively extended it.

The state of Georgia, where Whitefield preached and established an orphanage, prohibited slavery. But in 1749 there was a move to legalize the ownership and trading of human beings and the great evangelical leader George Whitefield was a leader of that campign. His orphanage owned slaves and upon Whitefield’s death those slaves were bequeathed as property to the Countess of Huntingdon, a benefactor of Whitefield who helped pay for his revival campaigns and was a major benefactor of the British evangelical movement.

The Oxford Dictionary of National Biography discusses the role of evangelical Christians in ending slavery and it notes: “During the first half-century of religious revivalism, from the 1730s to the 1780s, evangelicals showed little interest in the Atlantic slave trade or the enslavement of Africans. The mid-century progenitors of Anglican evangelicalism.... left no record of opposition to slavery in their deeds or words.”

More importantly it notes that “several important evangelicals... had a vested interest in human bondage.” Rev. Martin Madan was a slave owner who used involuntary human labor on his plantations in the Caribbean. The profits from this venture were used to build a chapel for evangelicals in London. Like Newton, his fellow evangelical slavery, he also wrote hymns.

The Oxford Dictionary of National Biography says that the few “evangelicals who took an interest in the enslaved focused exclusively on the African’s spiritual welfare.” Slaves, in accordance with the New Testament, were told to accept their bondage and improve their spiritual condition.

Only in the late 1700s did a significant group of evangelicals become persuaded that slavery was wrong and this was more due to the lobbying of Quakers than to any biblical morality. This group of evangelicals “had initially shown more concern with the promotion of religion than the cause of liberty. If left to their own devices, it seems likely that they would have pursued an ameliorationist programme, rather than the abolition of the slave trade.” They only embraced abolitionism in 1786.

If one group deserves praise in the fight against slavery it is not the evangelicals. It is the Quakers. This sect is not evangelical in any sense of the word and were often persecuted by evangelicals for their teachings. But Quakers consistently opposed slavery, which is one reason for the persecution they suffered at the hands of orthodox believers. Quakers were petitioning parliament to abolish slavery while the evangelicals were still counting the profits from the trade.

The campaign to portray evangelicals as the force behind abolitionism is a false one. And even the major evangelical influences on Wilberforce, Whitefield and Newton, were slavers. Newton’s conversion didn’t stop his slave trading as is claimed by the Religious Right. And Whitefield was a major leader of the campaign to bring slavery to the state of Georgia.

Thanks to George Whitefield by 1810 there were over 100,000 slaves in the state of Georgia. And by the time of the Civil War there were close to half a million. It is probably not an exaggeration to say that this prominent evangelical revivalist alone made it possible to enslave over 1 million people from the time he pushed for the legalization of slavery in Georgia until it was abolished by the Civil War just over a century later. Whitefield helped establish one of the largest slave trading regions in the world. Anyone think Anschutz will make a film about that?

I can’t find a firm figure regarding how many slaves were freed by the 1833 abolition act but I found several references to the compensation paid out by the British government to slave owners. It is said that £100 per slave was paid to the owners who “lost” their property. Elsewhere I read that £20 million in total compensation was given out. That would seem to indicate 200,000 slaves were freed.

If evangelicals wants to take credit for those 200,000 I’m happy to let them do so (though it is not quite accurate). But I would like them to take credit for the additional slavery that existed because of the efforts of George Whitelfield. And from what I see Whitefield’s actions lead to the enslavement of five people for every one that Wilberforce helped free. That comes to a deficit of 800,000 slaves. Evangelicals ought not celebrate and sing Amazing Grace too loudly. Their history in the slave trade is far, far dirtier than they are admitting.

Illustration: Our illustration is of evangelist George Whitefield, slaver.

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5 Comments:

Blogger Ethereal said...

This is one of the reasons why I personally dislike christianity. As a black male, my ancestors were enslaved my many european christains that support the bible with the spripture supporting slavery.

Ultimately, I hate christanity.

Robert

February 26, 2007

 
Blogger Jon Whitmer said...

It is unfortunate that Christians such as those mentioned in this article used the Bible to support slavery. Nonetheless, as with the Crusades, the Spanish Inquisition, and the persecution of Anabaptists by the Reformed and Lutheran traditions, in and following the Reformation Era, there is a tendency to get certain things wrong about what the Bible says regarding slavery.

I am currently taking a course in African American Writers and was surprised to learn that the Puritans fairly quickly adopted black slavery (esp. Cotton Mather). The big motivation was the love of money: indentured servants cost too much (esp. because they kept running away) and the "Indians", who were on their home-turf, were able to resist any efforts to be enslave...and actually ended up sometimes being slave-holders themselves. The Arabic slave trade had been in practice for about a millenium and made use of the readiness of many Africans to sell their own people for...you guessed it...money. It was a booming market ready to be exploited by the God-loving Puritans who thought their were in the Promised Land. My how easily we humans mess things up!....

So when these Christians support slavery with the Bible they distort what the Bible says about slavery. And in encouraging slaves to endure their lot with Christian humility, it is perhaps the foulest, most hypocritically self-serving theology that could ever come into being. Also, it does NOT reflect the teachings of either Christ or the Gospels, and is therefore not true Christianity.

September 25, 2009

 
Blogger GodlessZone said...

John: You say these people "distort what the Bible says about slavery" and that telling slave "to endure their lot with Christian humility" is foul. It is, but the Apostle Paul told slave to obey they masters, he didn't say "Masters free your slaves." And since many of the Christian converts were slaves his advice is particularly disgusting.

While you claim all this is a distortion can you provide the section where the Bible condemns slavery? All the references that it gives condones it. And in the Levitical Code masters are told that they may beat their slaves provided it doesn't lead to the slaves death -- on the same day of the beating. If they linger in pain for a few days before dying then God supposedly said it was okay.

September 25, 2009

 
Blogger Holypig said...

Wow 100% wrong on almost every point. but then God-haters always get it wrong. Try reading real history & not get your info off of Wakopedia. FACT WHITFIELD was Anti-slavery & when claim that Evangelicals persecuted Quakers is a joke because the Evangelicals didn't exist then. I love how Liberal God-hater always quote from bad sources that quote from bad sources but never bother to read the Original documents. Try reading Whitfield's Journal so you don't sound like such a retarded moron.

May 03, 2010

 
Blogger GodlessZone said...

Dear Holy, or do you prefer Pig?

Thanks for the laugh and the total lies. Why did you insult Wikipedia when I didn't use them as a source? As for Evangelicals, are you saying the Puritans who murdered Quakers, were not evangelicals? Why then do modern evangelicals claim they were? And not just the Puritans either. The history, The Emergence of Evangelicalism, published by the evangelical publisher, Inter-Varsity, has chapters on evangelicals in Wales from 1640-1850, It discusses evangelicals in the US prior to the Great Awakening (1730s), it has articles on Luther's "evangelical character" which is even earlier. Another work, Evangelicalism in Modern Britain: A history from 1730s to the 1980s also exists. Apparent lots evangelicals didn't get your new history that such people didn't exist. Neither did evangelicals of the day like Whitefield or Jonathan Edwards, but evaneglicals that existed and preached during a time when you say they didn't exist.

All Whitefield histories show he purchased and owned slaves at this Georgia orphanage as I stated. Whitefield's jouirnal says slaves shouldn't be mistreated but he wrote: "Whether it be lawful for Christians to buy slaves, I shall not take it upon me to determine..." Obviously since he bought slaves and kept them he thought it lawful. Whitefield is also the presumed author of A Letters to the Negroes Lately Converted to Christ in America. It is a theological apology for slavery.

The 1772 edition Great Awakening Memoirs & Life of George Whitefield, It mentions that he campaigned for the legalization of slavery and that he then went and purchased slaves for his use at the orphanage. But i guess the 1772 book got that from Wikipedia.

May 04, 2010

 

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