Abstract

Between Fetters and Freedom: African American Baptists Since Emancipation. Edited by Edward R. Crowther and Keith Harper. (Macon, Ga.: Mercer University Press, 2015. Pp. [x], 261. $35.00, ISBN 978-0-88146-540-2.) I was raised in an interdenominational household. My father was entrenched in the National Baptist Convention, USA, Incorporated (not to be confused with the National Baptist Convention of America, Unincorporated), and my mother was a product of the National Primitive Baptist Convention, USA, Incorporated. Baffling, right? Distinctions like incorporated, unincorporated, and primitive seem innocuous, yet they point to major theological differences and are the result of both legal and physical fights. Between Fetters and Freedom: African American Baptists since Emancipation encourages readers to question the monolithic understandings of the African American religious experience. Edited by Edward R. Crowther and Keith Harper, the volume suggests that phrases like black Baptist and black church have outlived their usefulness, and a closer reading of particular institutional and individual stories provides a deeper appreciation for the complexity and diversity of black religiosity. In the opening chapter, noted black Baptist historian Sandy Dwayne Martin examines black Baptist identity during and after the Civil War. While not based on any new research, Martin's chapter reinforces the link between temporal and eternal concerns among African American Christians. According to Martin, notions that otherworldly pursuits do not reflect a deep yearning for freedom in this life are completely false. African Americans viewed emancipation as a vindication of and by faith. Martin's essay is followed by Charles F. Irons's examination of black Baptists in postwar North Carolina. Irons shows that contrary to popular belief, all black Baptists did not start independent congregations immediately after slavery. Some chose to continue long-standing relations with white Baptists, and in fact, themes of choice and variation more accurately capture the black experience in the immediate postwar period than the theme of separation (p. 38). Irons's thesis stands as a corrective to the historiography that equates black autonomy with separation. Eric Michael Washington's work on the formation of black Baptist foreign mission work suggests that Ethiopianism provided ... a theological basis for racial uplift both at home and on the continent of Africa (p. 59). Most discussions of pan-African theologies overlook this tradition within the black Baptist movement, so Washington tries to trace a continual line of religious nationalist sentiment among black Baptist missionaries to Africa. While the chapter shows the penchant for independence among black Baptist missionaries, some degree of cooperation was essential to the success of their efforts. The separatist/cooperationist dichotomy has led scholars to misinterpret the nuanced relationship between black and white Baptists, particularly in the South. In reality, black Baptists could not have done all they were able to do so soon after emancipation without white support. …

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