Tinkers and poormen: Baptists and grassroots religion, 1609-2009.
Holcomb, Carol Crawford
In 1931, Bernard Shaw hailed John Bunyan, arguably the most famous
seventeenth-century English Baptist, as "England's greatest
prose writer."
**********
Nevertheless, in his own day, Bunyan was considered little more
than a "Tinker and a Poor Man." (1) Baptists have not often
been accused of being elitists. The earliest Baptist preachers were
derided by their enemies as uneducated commoners. They were maligned as
"mechanicks, taking upon them to preach and baptize." (2) They
were dismissed as "smiths, taylors, shoomakers, pedlars, weavers,
etc." (3) More educated Englishmen complained that the Baptists
"utter old broken notes taken from other men's sermons."
(4) Even more recent observers have commented on the humble origins of
our Baptist founders. J. F. McGregor observed that during the English
Reformation Baptists "were too ignorant to understand scripture and
incapable of logical discourse." (5) He gave this summary of
seventeenth-century Baptists leadership:
The Baptists' fundamental weakness was their inability to attract
leaders of the quality necessary to resolve the ambiguities in
their relationship both with the world and their fellow
radicals.... The early congregations of the middling sort
established solid mediocrity as the primary criterion for
leadership.... Imaginative talent, lay or clerical, was usually
either suppressed or alienated by the sect's narrow legalism and
claustrophobic discipline. (6)
These statements represent the propensity among some academics to
preference intellectual history over social history and to dismiss
popular religious movements regardless of how pervasive or influential
they might have been. Yet, seventeenth-century Baptists may accuse us of
missing the forest for the trees. Our denomination was little visited by
the cultural elite--particularly in the first two centuries-because they
intended to liberate the church from the stranglehold of elitist
clergymen and to place it in the hands of ordinary folk. Baptists
believed the church had been nearly smothered by unbiblical
ecclesiastical systems. You do not have to read far in
seventeenth-century literature to find the established church referred
to as "the whore of Babylon." As our friend Doug Weaver has
demonstrated so capably, the Baptist odyssey was a search for the New
Testament church. When Baptists chose a regenerate church over an
establishment and a democratic church order over an ecclesiastical
hierarchy, they deliberately, inexorably cast their lot with the common
people. (Baptists were democratic before democracy was cool.) The
Baptist story mirrors the decidedly uninspiring tale of the masses
because Baptists believed that the church belonged to "tinkers and
poor men."
Four examples are offered here-one from each of the four centuries
of Baptist witness--to illustrate how Baptists have appealed to the
grassroots: (1) the battle for religious liberty in the seventeenth
century; (2) the eighteenth-century global missions campaign; (3) the
story of Ann Judson and the women's ecumenical missionary movement;
and (4) the puzzling Baptist growth in the twentieth century.
Baptists and the Popular Campaign for Religious Liberty (1609)
We begin this sprint through Baptist history with the campaign for
religious liberty. The war Baptists waged for religious liberty is oft
cited as one of the denomination's greatest accomplishments. The
fact that Baptists were of the common sort makes their role in the fight
for religious liberty all the more remarkable. Leon McBeth suggested
that Thomas Helwys's little pamphlet, The Mistery of Iniquity, was
"perhaps the first plea for religious liberty for all people in the
English language." (7) All of these qualifiers must be present to
make the statement true--religious liberty, for all people, in English.
So where do Baptists fit in this narrative of religious liberty? The
Western intellectual tradition of religious liberty and freedom of
conscience has a long and illustrious history with origins traceable to
early antiquity. Amanda Porterfield made this argument in her book, The
Transformation of American Religion: "The idea that the conscience
has priority over external authority has antecedents in Abelard's
Ethics, the Islamic Qur'an, Augustine's Confessions,
Paul's letters, Plato's dialogues, and stories about Hebrew
prophets who called people to task for not obeying God's
will." (8) However, Porterfield asserted that these sources pale in
comparison to the influence of the Protestant Reformation on the issue
of conscience. John Witte, Jr., in Reformation of Rights, also viewed
the Protestant Reformation as the font of religious liberty--although he
preferenced Calvin's reforms over all others. Witte argued that
intellectual historians should look to Geneva for the fights of
conscience rather than to Locke's enlightenment. (9)
As the religious wars of the late sixteenth-century ravaged Europe,
dissenters increasingly called for religious toleration and the
sentiments made their way across the English Channel. A. G. Dickens
argued that "a good many Elizabethan writers and parliamentary
speakers" had "advocated religious toleration." (10) The
queen and her advisors likely took their cue from Sir Thomas More, who
advocated religious toleration in Utopia. King Utopus, wrote More,
"ascribed by law that everyone may cultivate the religion of his
choice, and strenuously proselytize for it too, provided he does so
quietly, modestly, rationally, and without insulting others."
Furthermore, Utopus was "quite sure that it was arrogant folly for
anyone to force conformity with his own beliefs on everyone else by
threats or violence." (11) These statements were decidedly radical
for his day, yet More still understood freedom of conscience as a
privilege to be granted at the discretion of the state. He felt it was
in the state's best interest to foster religious toleration, but
did not deny that the state had the fight to grant or revoke that
privilege as it saw fit.
One of Queen Elizabeth's advisors, Johannes Althusius, openly
endorsed "religious toleration and absolute liberty of conscience
for all as a natural corollary and consequence of the Calvinist teaching
of absolute sovereignty of God whose relationship with his creatures
could not be trespassed." (12) This did not mean that he supported
unrestricted religious expression. He believed liberty of conscience to
be a separate issue from the exercise of that liberty. Persecuted
minorities responded to this line of reasoning by drawing clear
connections between the internal conscience and the outward expression
of religious conviction. "How is it possible to grant freedom of
conscience without exercising religion?" queried a Dutch reformed
pamphlet in 1584: "For what are the consequences for people who
wish to enjoy this freedom? If they have no ceremonies at all and do not
invoke God to testify to the piety and reverence they bear him, they are
in fact left without any religion and without fear of God." (13) In
other words, freedom of conscience is meaningless unless people are able
to act upon their convictions. The question of the extent to which the
religious activities of citizens should be regulated divided the
advocates for religious toleration well into the seventeenth century.
The Whitehall Debates of 1648-1649 illustrate the spectrum of
opinion regarding the implementation of religious toleration. In her
1975 article on the Whitehall Debates, Carolyn Polizzotto argued that
the Puritans could be divided into three groups based on their views of
toleration. She pointed out that "no one disputed ... that civil
censures were powerless against the inward man: that is, the
conscience." (14) They disagreed on the rights of the government to
censure the outward man: that is, the exercise of conscience. The most
conservative party believed it was the government's right to compel
dissenters to worship according to the patterns of the established
church. The middle party, the independents, did not believe dissenters
should be "compelled" to worship, but that they should be
"restrained" from worshipping apart from the established
churches. Baptists fit into the third category with those who believed
that the government had no authority to "compel" or
"restrain" the religious exercises of its citizens. Polizzotto
listed Thomas Collier as a representative of this position in those
debates. She failed to note, however, that Baptists had been making this
argument for nearly forty years before the Whitehall Debates.
Baptist writers represented the earliest wave of popular calls for
religious liberty in English. Thomas Helwys published The Mistery of
Iniquity in 1611. In this treatise, Helwys made the argument that the
king has no jurisdiction over the conscience whatsoever. Leonard Busher
articulated a similar argument in 1614, and a year later, Baptist pastor
John Murton added his plea for religious liberty to the growing body of
Baptist literature--reputedly smuggled in a milk bottle from a prison
cell. Each of these documents challenged the idea that earthly
governments have the power to make laws concerning matters of
conscience. This theme was echoed in the writings of Roger Williams and
John Clarke in Colonial America. Baptists were among the most radical,
the loudest, and the most consistent voices for religious liberty
throughout the seventeenth century.
These facts are not new information, but it is critical to remember
that Baptists were commoners who dispersed these ideas beyond the halls
of Oxford and Cambridge. Baptist rhetoric, debates, and publications
were expressed in plain, informal styles accessible to ordinary English
men and women. Helwys' Mistery of Iniquity is a clear example of
"grass roots" communication. Richard Groves noted that
"Historians have not been favorably impressed with Helwys's
literary abilities or the quality of the book as a whole." (15)
Various critics have lamented the deficiencies in Helwys's
education and style--including H. Wheeler Robinson. However, Robinson
made this important observation: The Mistery of Iniquity "is a
layman's book, both in authorship and style. It has the passion,
and to some extent, the method of the prophet Amos." (16) This was
a book for the masses. Even J. F. McGregor, whom you might recall had
few kind words for the Baptists, acknowledged that "Nevertheless,
they were the first radical popular movement to take advantage of the
freedom and relative cheapness of the printing press ... to appeal to an
increasingly literate population." (17) However galling it may have
been to their enemies, Baptist presses continued to "vomit
forth" pamphlets faster than they could be confiscated by the
establishment. We are right to taut our heritage of religious liberty.
But we would do well to remember that even when Baptists addressed their
writings to kings, they wrote the words for peasants. Baptist battles
have always been waged in the press and the pulpit. Before the end of
the seventeenth century, the English people had become thoroughly
Protestant and the English Parliament had passed the Act of Toleration.
Perhaps we should give some credit for the wide public support for
toleration to the Baptists' pedantic pamphlets on religious
liberty.
Baptists and the Popular Campaign for World Missions (1700s)
By the eighteenth century, Baptists had begun to attract more
adherents from the ranks of the bourgeoisie; nevertheless, Baptists
continued to make their mark by preparing religious ideas for popular
consumption. In 1784, a young Particular Baptist pastor in Northampton,
England, John Ryland, Jr., opened a parcel of books sent to him by a
friend. In the parcel, he discovered a little pamphlet by the New
England theologian, Jonathan Edwards. Ryland found hope for revival in
the words of the American pastor. Edwards balanced his Calvinism with a
warm evangelical spirit--a spirit sadly lacking among the Baptists
churches around London at that time. Ryland shared the ideas he found
with his circle of friends in Northamptonshire, including John Sutcliff
and Andrew Fuller. The enthusiasm of these young ministers soon began to
shape their Baptist association as they called the churches of the
Midlands to pray for a "revival of religion." (18) Thus,
Edwards inspired and informed the writings of Andrew Fuller.
In Fuller's well-reasoned rebuttal of hyper-Calvinism that
appeared in 1785, he dealt the system a "mortal blow" within
Baptist life. Fuller went after hyper-Calvinism, claimed one historian,
with a "terrier-like tenacity." He sank his teeth into his
opponent's argument and "shook it to death." (19)
Fuller's treatise, The Gospel Worthy of All Acceptation, presented
a twofold argument. First, he explained that sinners are capable of
responding to the gospel:
No one in his senses would think of calling the blind to look, the
deaf to hear, or the dead to rise up and walk; and of threatening
them with punishment in case of their refusal. But if the blindness
arise from the love of darkness rather than light; if the deafness
resemble that of the adder which stoppeth the ear ... and if the
death consist in alienation of heart from God and the absence of
all desire after him, there is no absurdity or cruelty in such
addresses. (20)
Second, Fuller castigated his fellow ministers for having
"lost the spirit of the primitive preachers" and warned them
that they neglected preaching the gospel to their own peril. (21) By
refocusing the Particular Baptists on their obligation to call sinners
to repent, Fuller helped Baptists restore the balance between God's
sovereignty and human responsibility. Arguably, Fuller's Gospel
Worthy of all Acceptation is a popular treatment of Edward's
Inquiry into the Freedom of the Will. One of my students, Adam King,
wrote his senior thesis comparing the two documents last year. He was
convinced that Fuller found in Edwards the theological and philosophical
tools to dismantle hyper-Calvinism. Subsequently, Fuller's treatise
tilled the soil for the missionary zeal of his dear friend, William
Carey.
On October 5, 1783, Ryland wrote in his journal: "baptized
today poor journeyman shoe cobbler." (22) The poor cobbler was
William Carey. After the baptism, John Sutcliff recommended Carey for
his first pastorate, and Fuller became Carey's life-long supporter.
(23) In 1788, Carey met with his friends Fuller, Sutcliff, and Ryland at
the latter's home in Northampton. Carey urged his more established
colleagues to publish pamphlets asserting that "something should be
done for the heathen." The older three agreed that Carey should
write instead. So he poured his heart into a little book called An
Enquiry into the Obligations of Christians to Use Means for the
Conversion of the Heathen. In this work, he detailed his conviction that
Christians were commanded to take the gospel to all the nations.
Furthermore, the failure of believers to act upon this command rested
not in their impotence but in their disobedience--a willful act of
negligence. After tracing the history of missions and sketching a
portrait of the world's geography and population, Carey enjoined
Christians to join him in "fervent and united prayer. .... We must
not be contented however with praying," he concluded, "without
exerting ourselves in the use of means for the obtaining of those things
we pray for." (24) For any who lacked the imagination to enumerate
the means, Carey outlined how Christians might establish a society to
send missionaries around the world.
When the ministers of the Northamptonshire Baptist Association
gathered again in 1791, Carey urged them to form a society. By this
time, most of the ministers present were "sympathetic in
principle" to his proposal. (25) But the enormity of what he was
suggesting gave them pause. Sutcliff, in particular, counseled them to
proceed with caution. Another year passed. Finally, in 1792, Carey
persuaded the association to establish the Baptist Missionary Society
(BMS). The BMS chose Fuller to serve as the society's first
secretary (a post he held until his death) and appointed Carey as a
missionary to India. James Leo Garrett has noted that Fuller's job
as secretary did not involve a desk or cushy chair. Instead, he
crisscrossed England on horseback, tirelessly promoting the
society's work. (26)
Carey soon relocated to India, set up the Serampore Mission, and
began publicizing the missionary cause. The arrival of William Ward in
1798 and Joshua Marshman the following year brought new resources and
talents to the mission. Marshman's training as an educator would
bear fruit in the development of an extensive educational program from
primary schools to a missionary training institution called Serampore
College. Ward, a printer by profession, helped Carey place his
translations of the scriptures into the hands of the people. In a 2005
article on Carey in Mission Studies, Donald Alban, Jr., Robert H. Woods,
Jr., and Marsha Daigle-Williamson argued:
The Enquiry, most obviously, was Carey's theological and moral
justification for his missionary work to the "heathen." Yet in many
ways it would awaken him to the power of the pen to both justify
and edify the masses. In fact, it was through this work that Carey
both shut down detractors to his cause and encouraged others to
join his missionary ranks. His work with the Serampore Press was
a natural extension of this early effort. (27)
In his forty years in India, Carey translated the scriptures into
Bengali and provided linguistic aids for the Mahratta, Sanskrit,
Telinga, Punjab, and the Bhotanta languges. Bill Brackney asserted that
Carey translated the scriptures for "one third of the world's
population." (28)
Without detracting from the tremendous accomplishments of Carey, we
must ask why he has been cited as the "father of modern Protestant
missions." Kenneth B. Mullholland argued that Carey "did not
invent the Protestant missionary movement out of nothing. He constructed
the platform from which the modern Protestant missionary movement was
launched out of a series of planks hewed during the centuries between
Luther and himself." (29) We know that the Moravians established
the Society for the Furtherance of the Gospel in 1741, over half a
century before the BMS was organized. Moravian missionaries arrived in
Serampore nearly two decades before Carey stepped ashore in India, and
apparently, his first convert had heard the gospel first from a Moravian
missionary. Carey knew about the work of the Moravians and pointed to
them as examples in his Enquiry: "Have not the missionaries of the
Unitas Fratrum, or Moravian Brethren, encountered the scorching heat of
Abyssinia, and the frozen dimes of Greenland, and Labrador, their
difficult languages, and savage manners?" (30)
So have we overstated Carey's influence since he was not the
first? I do not believe so. Stephen Neill, distinguished historian of
Christian missions, suggested that Carey's work "marks the
entry of the English speaking world on a large scale into the missionary
enterprise." (31) The Enquiry, combined with a flood of letters and
articles from India, stimulated the growth of a host of new missionary
societies. For example, Congregationalist leaders formed their own
mission organization in 1795. Anglican clergy organized the Church
Missionary Society in 1799. These were followed by the Wesleyan
Methodist Missionary Society, the mission boards of the Church of
Scotland, and many others. Ruth Tucker asserted that Carey's
"daring example outweighed all of his accomplishments in
India." (32) Although he did not invent Protestant missions, his
work helped fan the flames of a small endeavor into a great missionary
fire. By the end of the nineteenth century, the Protestant missionary
movement transmitted the Christian religion to a "greater area of
the world's surface than had taken place in all the preceding
Christian centuries put together." (33)
Protestant Women's Missionary Movement (1800s)
In the seventeenth century, Baptists popularized religious liberty;
in the eighteenth century, they popularized foreign missions. In the
nineteenth century, Baptist women helped launch the Protestant
women's foreign missionary crusade. This gender-based mass movement
"eclipsed the Student Volunteer Movement and the Laymen's
Missionary movement in size," and mobilized more women for service
than any other woman's movement in the nineteenth century. (34)
Women, including Ann Hasseltine Judson, Lottie Moon, Nannie Helen
Burroughs, Helen Barrett Montgomery, and Annie Armstrong, called upon
American women to join forces and "win the world for Christ."
Each of their stories illustrates how Baptists promoted their faith to
common people with pen and press. Perhaps none does so better than Ann
Judson whose life epitomized the work of women in foreign missions.
One of the earliest women's missionary societies in America
was formed on October 9, 1800 at the behest of a Baptist woman named
Mary Webb. (35) Though crippled by a "severe sickness" at age
five and bound to a wheel chair, Webb encouraged fourteen Baptist and
Congregationalist women to join together in the Boston Female Society
for Missionary Purposes. These women prayed and raised support for
missions. Their annual dues were two dollars. The Boston society's
example influenced women throughout the country. Within a year
Congregationalist women had formed a female society as an auxiliary to
the Massachusetts Missionary Society, and women in dozens of towns
throughout New England followed suit. In 1812, Webb published an
advertisement in the Massachusetts Missionary Magazine, inviting other
women's societies to correspond with her. Over the next two years
forty societies responded. (36)
The winsome, colorful letters of Ann Judson fired Protestant
women's enthusiasm for foreign missions. She was the first American
woman to serve as a missionary on a foreign field. Her story begins one
June evening in 1810, when a young seminarian, Adoniram Judson, dined in
the home of a prominent deacon named John Hasseltine. Judson's
biographer insists that Adoniram was "struck dumb" by the
sight of the deacon's youngest daughter, a "beautiful
creature" with "jet-black curls, clear olive complexion and
dark, lustrous eyes." The young man apparently recovered his voice
well enough to woo her, because the two were married on February 5,
1812. A few days later, Adoniram Judson, Luther Rice and three other men
were ordained as foreign missionaries. As they knelt to be commissioned,
Ann slipped from her pew and knelt not far from them, publicly
demonstrating that she, too, felt called to the service of foreign
missions.
Because of the conflicts of the War of 1812 and the potential
natural hazards of sea travel, the missionaries set sail on separate
ships for India where they planned to meet Carey. Knowing that they
would be interacting with Baptists, the Judsons used the many idle hours
aboard ship to study baptism in their Greek New Testaments. To their
dismay, they found no record in the Bible of the form of baptism they
had been taught from infancy in the Congregational Church. Within a few
days after arriving at the Serampore mission, Adoniram was convinced
that the Baptists had it right. Ann struggled a bit longer, but finally
agreed with him. They crafted a letter to Serampore insisting that
"the immersion of a professing believer is the only Christian
baptism" and requested baptism by immersion from the British
Baptist missionaries. (37) About a month after the Judsons were
baptized, Rice confessed that he too had become convinced that the
Baptists were correct in the matter. On November 1, 1812, he was
immersed, giving American Baptists three missionaries on a foreign field
before the first mission board was ever formed.
The first challenge these three fledgling Baptists faced was
procuring financial support. Honor prohibited them from continuing to
seek aid from their Congregationalist investors. The three decided that
Adoniram and Ann would press on to establish a mission while Rice headed
back to America to rally the Baptists to their cause. Rice returned by
the first possible ship to America and quickly began to make contacts
with existing missionary societies and persuaded still others to
organize. In a day before railroads, with few steamboats, when
stagecoaches were expensive, Rice "generally traveled in his own
one-horse light conveyance and he often astonished his brethren with the
rapidity of his movements and the suddenness of his transitions from one
place to another." (38) By 1813, he identified seventeen local and
regional societies willing to "hold the ropes" for the
Judsons. But Rice had greater plans for the Baptists than loosely
organized societies. On May 18, 1814, his vision came to fruition with
the establishment of the General Missionary Convention of the Baptist
Denomination in the United States for Foreign Missions, commonly
referred to as the Triennial Convention.
After numerous conflicts with the East India Company, the Judsons
finally chose to settle in Burma. On the last leg of the journey to this
dangerous new land, Ann gave birth to a stillborn child--without a
nurse, or doctor, or even another woman to aid her. The child was buried
at sea. Ann's first sight of Burma was from a stretcher as she was
carried ashore, still exhausted from her labor and grief. In spite of
her suffering, she continued to send letters home that were circulated
in women's magazines across the country. American women were
thrilled by her vivid descriptions of Burma. Her piety and passion
challenged readers to greater faith. They empathized with her loneliness
in a foreign land and shared her grief after the death of her first
child, but also following the death of her second, Roger, who died when
he was six months old. When Ann returned to the United States for
furlough in 1822, she was greeted as a celebrity in churches and
women's gatherings across the Eastern seaboard. Baptists welcomed
her as a dignitary and vigorously promoted her work in Burma.
After two years abroad, Ann returned to Burma to find that even
greater dangers awaited her. Adoniram was imprisoned during the British
Burmese War along with other Americans suspected by the Burmese of
collaborating with the British. Though nursing a newborn baby, Ann
struggled to take food and supplies to the prisoners. Tragically, the
effort mined her health, and she died in 1826. Her death was soon
followed by that of her child. News of Ann's death sent shock waves
of grief throughout Protestant circles, and her name soon became a
synonym for sacrificial missionary service. (39)
Why did this particular woman become such a prominent American
heroine? She died half a world away from her home, in a foreign land,
and left no children either to mourn her or celebrate her work. One
possible answer is that Ann Judson had mass appeal. Her life, her
journals, and letters resonated with ordinary American women and at the
same time offered them a tantalizing glimpse of a world beyond their
own. Furthermore, her name became a household word among Protestants in
the nineteenth century because of the grassroots networks of women that
emerged to promote the work of Christian missions. In the decades after
the Civil War, the women of every Protestant denomination in America
would join together to establish independent women's boards. Their
missionary journals celebrated her life and those of other female
missionaries, bringing news of women around the world into the homes of
ordinary women. Baptist women can be found at the vanguard of missionary
service and organization as they blazed new trails for the women who
would follow. Baptist women also brought up the rear of female
missionary organizations in the South--yet Southern Baptist women
continued the tradition of promoting missions at the grass roots well
into the twentieth century.
Denominational Resilience and Postwar Revivals (1900s)
Finally, we turn to the twentieth century to a time when Baptist
outsiders became the insiders, and Baptist ideas seeped into the ground
water. Martin Marty has called this the "Baptistification" of
American culture. (40) Baptists not only influenced the religious
landscape; they also moved up the socio-economic ladder and became major
players in national politics. A host of events coalesced to create an
environment so suited for Baptist growth. While we should be wary of
triumphalism, the story of Baptist success needs to be explored. Baptist
historians should speak with a louder voice to the issues that other
religious historians have been asking for over twenty years. Many of us
here are southerners and our context has, understandably, shaped our
historical agenda.
We Baptists have an interesting pattern in our historiography. We
have exceptional works that address Baptist life and culture in the
early part of the century, including the scholarship of John Lee Eighmy,
Rufus Spain, Wayne Flynt, Mike Williams, and Karen Bullock. We also have
rich resources that treat Baptists in the last part of the century,
including Nancy Ammerman's Baptist Battles and Bill Leonard's
God's Last and Only Hope. All these scholars concentrate on the
century's beginning and its end. The long list of Baptist
historical commentary at the end of the century tends to be clustered
around the Baptist conflicts. Almost without exception, our histories of
twentieth- century Southern Baptists leave an impression of
fragmentation and decline even though Baptists throughout the country
grew from roughly 3 million in 1900 to nearly 35 million by the end of
the century. Despite this increase, most Baptist historians have been
preoccupied with the fundamentalist storms that fragmented Southern
Baptist life at the end of the century. For example, the best
sociological analysis of Southern Baptists, Baptist Battles, by
Ammerman, addresses the dissolution of the southern evangelical
hegemony. She argued that after 1980, "Southern
evangelicalism--while still pervasive--had been disestablished."
(41) Ammerman's sober analysis foreshadowed the numerical plateau
of the 1990s. This is the end of the twentieth century story--the
decline.
Still the larger picture of numerical growth needs more attention.
I do not believe statistical gains measure the "success" or
"failure" of a denomination, and we should certainly avoid
interpreting rising church membership as a singular sign of God's
favor. That said, can numbers tell us anything? What does it mean when
the Baptists not only appealed to the masses, but succeeded in reaching
them? How should we interpret the tremendous socio-economic gains in the
twentieth century? For the first time it became common place for
Baptists to hold the highest offices in national government. At one
point in the 1980s, the president, vice president, the speaker of the
house and Senate majority leader were all Baptists--from different
political parties. What does this say about the denomination founded by
tinkers and poor men?
To complicate matters, while denominational historians have been
writing a history of declension, many historians of American
evangelicalism have been writing histories of massive evangelical
expansion. In fact, I would say that the growth of evangelicalism has
been "the story" in American religious history for nearly
thirty years--although, I am not completely convinced that the
historians of evangelicalism have painted the clearest picture of
Baptists. The full story of the grassroots appeal of Baptists in the
twentieth century has slipped through the cracks. There are still many
questions that need to be answered, and I would like to propose a few of
them.
The Twentieth Century--The Middle Years
First, what accounts for the Baptist growth in the middle of the
century? In the twenty years leading up to 1960, Baptists added 20
million adherents, likely the result of post-wax revivals. Baptists grew
in numbers as did other Protestant denominations in the years following
World War II. Sydney Ahlstrom explained that the sources of the revival
reach back to the New Deal when a return of national confidence fostered
a renewed interest in religion. The "collapse of the European
order" and the crisis of World War II further stimulated the
religious sensibilities of the American people. After the war Americans
sought solace in the bosom of traditional values as unprecedented
industrial expansion yielded an "age of affluence." (42)
William McGloughlin commented that in the 1950s "we Americans
desperately sought to reaffirm our old values, to get 'back to
God,' to rid ourselves of subversives who were conspiring to
destroy our way of life." (43) As a result, Americans flocked to
the churches. Ahlstrom noted that church affiliation in 1910 represented
43 percent of the population, and by 1970, that percentage had grown to
62.4 percent.
Nearly everyone agrees that Billy Graham was the key figure in the
mid-century revivals. In the tradition of Billy Sunday, Dwight Moody,
and Charles Finney, Graham resurrected the urban revival. "By
1956," Ahlstrom reported, "the Billy Graham Evangelistic
Association was using almost all available mass media--advertising,
television, radio, paperback books, and cinema-and had an annual budget
of two million dollars." (44) Like earlier revivals, Baptist
churches were among the greatest beneficiaries--adding 20 million to
their membership in the years from 1940 to 1960. You have only to glance
at Gaustad's Atlas to see that every Protestant denomination
experienced growth in those years.
After 1960, Disciples, Presbyterians, Episcopalians, and
Congregationalists began to plateau. Lutheran membership peaked in 1970,
and Methodists in 1980. Mainline Protestant churches entered a period of
decline. Religious observers began to sound the death knell for
Protestant Christianity. Leonard Sweet observed that "as
theological dry rot worked its way through the edifice of old-line
religion, people began to go elsewhere for edification." (45) Their
search led them from "old-line" religion to
"old-time" religion, and in the 1970s "evangelicalism
emerged as a dominant religious force." (46)
Baptist membership statistics, however, did not mirror those of the
mainline churches. Baptist numbers were strong before the burst of
evangelicalism, and Baptist growth became nearly vertical between 1960
and 1970, a pattern that continued unabated into the 1990s. How do we
account for this? Apparently, Baptists benefited not only from the urban
revivals of Billy Graham, but also the evangelical resurgence of the
1970s. Southern Baptists made a seamless transition in the 1960s from
the Graham revivals to the neo-evangelical resurgence. To make the story
even more interesting, the growth trajectory of Black Baptist
denominations is nearly identical to that of Southern Baptists. Black
and white Baptists in the South experienced uninterrupted growth from
1940 until the last decade of the century--even through the turbulent
racial conflicts of the 1960s.
Again, how do we explain the Baptist growth of the 1960s? Some
would say the answer lies with demographics. Ammerman has demonstrated
that demographic shifts contributed to Southern Baptist growth. Her
studies indicate that Southern Baptism gained an average of I million
adherents every five years from 1936 to 1986 and that most of this
expansion took place in the South. She attributed this primarily to the
birth of the "Sun Belt" around 1960, when non-southerners
began to move to the South in large numbers. "By 1980," she
concluded, "over 10 percent of the South's population was born
outside the region, with that number considerably higher in urban
areas." (47) Thus, the success of Baptist churches in the South may
possibly be explained as a corollary to the expansion of the southern
population.
A hundred more explanations can be offered that lead to still more
questions. Can we simply explain Baptist growth as momentum from
post-War revivals? How did Baptist churches serve as both the source of
the civil rights movement and a major center of opposition? What role
does the denominational structure play in this growth? Answering all
these questions in this article is not possible, but we must continue to
explore what Martin Marty called "the Baptistification of American
religion." What will we say about a revolutionary religion when the
revolution is over? What will be the Baptist contribution in the next
century now that the tinker has become a president and the poor man a
millionaire?
(1.) Christopher Hill, A Tinker and a Poor Man: John Bunyan and His
Church, 1628-1688 (New York: W. W. Norton and Company, 1988), 3.
(2.) Thomas Edwards, Gangraena (London: printed by T. R. and E. M.
for Ralph Smith, 1645), see
http://www.archive.org/stream/gangraenaland200dupeuoft/gangraenaland200
dupeuoft_djvu.txt.
(3.) Daniel Featley, The Dippers dipt. Or, The AnaBaptists
duck'd and plung'd Over Head and Eares, at a Disputation in
Southwark, 4th ed. (London: printed for Nicholas Bourn and Richard
Royston, 1646).
(4.) T. Thacke, The Gainsayer Convinced (1649), 64, quoted in J. E
McGregor, "The Baptists: Fount of All Heresy," in J. F.
McGregor and B. Reay, ed. Radical Religion in the English Revolution
(New York: Oxford University Press, 1986), 30.
(5.) McGregor, "The Baptists: Fount of All Heresy," 30.
(6.) Ibid., 63.
(7.) Leon McBeth, The Baptist Heritage: Four Centuries of Baptist
Witness (Nashville, TN: Broadman Press, 1987), 103.
(8.) Amanda Porterfield, The Transformation of American Religion:
The Story of a Late Twentieth Century Awakening (New York: Oxford,
2001), 18.
(9.) John Witte, Jr., Reformation of Rights: Law, Religion and
Human Rights in Early Modern Calvinism (Cambridge: Cambridge University
Press, 2007).
(10.) A. G. Dickens, The English Reformation 2d ed. (University
Park: Penn State Press, 1989), 379. Dickens named Jacobus Acontius,
Alberico Gentilis, and Edwin Sandys as examples. Their writings can be
found in W. K. Jordan, The Development of Religious Toleration in
England (London: Alien and Unwin, 1936), 57ff, 66ff, 74ff.
(11.) Thomas More, Utopia, rev. ed (Cambridge: Cambridge University
Press, 2002), 94, 95.
(12.) Witte, Reformation of Rights, 9-10.
(13.) Marnix of St. Aldegonde, Discourse of a Nobleman (1584),
quoted in Witte, Reformation of Rights, 149.
(14.) Carolyn Polizzotto, "Liberty of Conscience and the
Whitehall Debates of 1648-49," Journal of Ecclesiastical History
26, no 1 (January 1975): 71.
(15.) Richard Groves, ed. Short History of the Mystery of Iniquity
by Thomas Helwys (Macon, GA: Mercer University Press, 1998), xxxii.
(16.) H. Wheeler Robinson, The Mistery of Iniquity by Thomas Helwys
of Gray's Inn and Boxtowe Hail, Nottingham (London: Kingsgate
Press, 1935), v, quoted in Ibid., xxxiii.
(17.) McGregor, "The Baptists: Fount of All Heresy," 31.
(18.) Brian Stanley, The History of the Baptist Missionary Society,
1792-1992 (Edinburgh: T&T Clark, 1992), 3-4.
(19.) A. C. Underwood, A History of the English Baptists (London:
The Carey Kingsgate Press, 1947), 166.
(20.) Andrew Fuller, "The Gospel Worthy of All
Acceptation," in Baptist Roots: A Reader in the Theology of a
Christian People, Curtis W. Freeman, James Wm. McClendon, Jr., and C.
Rosalee Velloso da Silva, ed. (Valley Forge, PA: Judson Press, 1999),
146.
(21.) Ibid., 147.
(22.) McBeth, Baptist Heritage, 184.
(23.) Stanley, The History of the Baptist Missionary Society, 7-8.
(24.) William Carey, An Enquiry, 1792, in A Sourcebook for Baptist
Heritage, ed. Leon McBeth (Nashville, TN: Broadman Press, 1990), 137.
(25.) Stanley, The History of the Baptist Missionary Society, 10.
(26.) James Leo Garrett, "Distinctive Theological Points that
Have Defined and Divided Baptists," Lecture, B. H. Carroll
Theological Institute Summer Colloquy, Arlington, TX, June 1, 2009.
(27.) Donald Alban, Jr., Robert H. Woods, Jr., and Marsha
Daigle-Williamson, "The Writings of William Carey: Journalism as
Mission in the Modern Age," Mission Studies 22, no.1 (2005): 94.
(28.) W H. Brackney, The Baptists (Westport, CT: Greenwood, 1988),
141.
(29.) Kenneth R Mulholland, "Moravians, Puritans, and the
Modern Missionary Movement," Bibliotheca Sacra 156 (April-June
1999): 221.
(30.) Carey, quoted in David A. Schattschneider, "William
Carey, Modern Missions, and the Moravian Influence," International
Bulletin of Missionary Research 22, no. 1 (January 1998): 10.
(31.) Stephen Neill, A History of Christian Missions (London:
Penguin Books, 1990), 222.
(32.) Ruth Tucker, From Jerusalem to Irian Jaya: A Biographical
History of Christian Missions (Grand Rapids, MI: Zondervan, 1983), 130.
(33.) A. Dakin, William Carey: Shoemaker, Linguist, Missionary
(Nashville, TN: Broadman Press, 1942), 9.
(34.) Patricia Hill, The Worm Their Household: The American
Woman's Foreign Mission Movement and Cultural Transformation, 1870
1920 (Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 1985), 3,5.
(35.) Juliette Mather, Light Three Candles: History of'
Virginia Woman's Missionary Union, 1874-1973 (Richmond, VA: WMU of
Virginia, 1973), 3. For studies of American women's foreign mission
societies see Hill, The Worm Their Household.
(36.) R. Pierce Beaver, All Loves Excelling: American Protestant
Women in World Missions (Grand Rapids, MI: Eerdmans, 1968), 14-19. By
1829, the Boston Female Society had become purely Baptist, donating its
gifts to Baptist causes.
(37.) Adoniram Judson, "Letter to English Missionaries
Requesting Immersion," in McBeth, Sourcebook, 206.
(38.) David Benedict, Fifty Years among the Baptists (New York:
Sheldon & Company, 1860), 116.
(39.) For more on the life of Ann Judson see Joan Jacobs Brumberg,
Mission for Life: The Story of the Family of Adoniram Judson (New York:
Free Press/Macmillan, 1980), and Courtney Anderson, To the Golden Shore:
The Life of Adoniram Judson (Valley Forge, PA: Judson Press, 1987).
(40.) Martin E. Marty, "Baptistification Takes Over,"
Christianity Today (September 2, 1983): 33-36.
(41.) Nancy Ammerman, Baptist Battles: Social Change and Religious
Conflict in the Southern Baptist Convention (Piscataway, NJ: Rutgers
University Press, 1990), 55.
(42.) Sydney E. Ahlstrom, A Religious History of the American
People (New Haven, CT Yale University, 1972), 950.
(43.) William McLoughlin, Revivals, Awakenings, and Reform
(Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1978), 179.
(44.) Ahlstrom, A Religious History, 957.
(45.) Leonard Sweet, "The 1960s: The Crisis of Liberal
Christianity and the Public Emergence of Evangelicalism," in
Evangelicalism and Modern America, ed. George Marsden (Grand Rapids, MI:
Eerdmans, 1984), 32.
(46.) Ibid., 43.
(47.) Ammerman, Baptist Battles, 58-59.
Carol Crawford Holcomb is associate professor of church history and
Baptist studies at the University of Mary Hardin-Baylor, Belton, Texas.