This is Part 1 of a Series on the Role of Spiritual Awakening in Ending Slavery in America.
The brilliant
historian, Dr. Thomas Sowell, who happens to be black, points out that although
slavery has been a world-wide institution practiced by peoples and civilizations
for thousands of years, it only became controversial in the 18th century in Western civilization and particularly in America. In the chapter entitled "Twisted History" in his book, The Thomas Sowell Reader, he writes,
Slavery was
just not an issue, not even among intellectuals, much less among political
leaders, until the 18th century – and then it was an issue only in
Western civilization. Among those who turned against slavery in the 18th century were George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, Patrick Henry and other
American leaders. You could research all of 18th century Africa
or Asia or the Middle East without finding any comparable rejection of slavery
there.
Walter E. Williams, the
black Professor of Economics at George Mason University, has made the same
point and commented that the unique characteristic of slavery in America—as
opposed to the rest of world history--was the “moral outrage” against it.
The Source of this Moral Outrage
In this article, I intend to show that this “moral outrage” against
slavery in America was a product of the First Great Awakening that ebbed and flowed
between 1726-70. I will argue that this Awakening, that revitalized Christianity
in Colonial America, unleashed the spiritual and moral forces that ultimately ended
slavery in America and throughout the Western world.
As a result of the Great Awakening, the racial chasm was
breached, slaves were humanized, and whites were awakened to the evils of
slavery. The Great Awakening, indeed, produced the “moral outrage” mentioned by
Sowell and Williams, and it marked the beginning of the end of slavery in
America.
George Whitfield Reaches Out to Blacks in His Preaching
Whitefield, for example, preached numerous times from the steps
of the Philadelphia courthouse to crowds of 10,000 and more, when the population of
the city was only 13,000. Among those listening was Benjamin Franklin who became a close friend and business partner with Whitefield.
In the crowds were also numerous blacks who were especially receptive to the evangelical, revival message that he preached. This was borne out by the fact that, after preaching his farewell sermon and retiring to his lodgings, he noted in his Journal, “Near 50 Negroes came to give me thanks for what God had done for their souls.” Whitefield considered this an answer to prayer, saying, “I have been much drawn in prayer for them, and have seen them wrought upon by the word preached” (Hyatt, Pilgrims and Patriots, 94).
In the crowds were also numerous blacks who were especially receptive to the evangelical, revival message that he preached. This was borne out by the fact that, after preaching his farewell sermon and retiring to his lodgings, he noted in his Journal, “Near 50 Negroes came to give me thanks for what God had done for their souls.” Whitefield considered this an answer to prayer, saying, “I have been much drawn in prayer for them, and have seen them wrought upon by the word preached” (Hyatt, Pilgrims and Patriots, 94).
One black woman who was converted under Whitefield’s ministry
became discouraged and prayed that the Lord would manifest Himself to her.
Shortly thereafter both she and Whitefield were in a meeting where a Baptist
minister was preaching. Whitefield said that the word came with such power that
the woman began to cry out and “could not help praising and blessing God.”
When some criticized her for interrupting the preacher,
Whitefield came to her defense saying he believed that, in that hour, “the Lord
Jesus took a great possession of her soul.” He went on to say, “I doubt not,
when the poor Negroes are to be called, God will highly favor them, to wipe off
their reproach, and show that He is no respecter of persons” (Hyatt, Pilgrim
and Patriots,
95).
It is obvious that in these revival meetings blacks and whites
were worshiping together. This should not be surprising, for in genuine
spiritual awakening, the Holy Spirit breaks down racial and cultural barriers,
and this occurred in the Great Awakening. Mark Noll, Professor of Church
History at Wheaton College, confirms this, saying, “It was under the impulse of
the revival that the chasm between white and black cultures was breached.”
Whitefield’s impact among the black populace of Colonial America
is indicated by the moving tribute that a young black woman, Phillis Wheatley,
wrote at the time of his death in 1770. Wheatley heard Whitefield preach in
Boston on more than one occasion and was profoundly impacted by his ministry (Hyatt,
Pilgrims
and Patriots, 94-95).
Wheatley, who became America’s first published black poet, was
17 years old when she wrote the poem about Whitefield. The words of her poem
express the strains of equality she heard in the Gospel he preached. It reads
in part,
Thou didst
in strains of eloquence refined,
Inflame the heart and
captivate the mind.
The greatest gift that
even God can give,
He freely offered to
the numerous throng.
Take him, ye Africans,
he longs for you,
Impartial Savior is his
title due.
Wheatley obviously quoted directly from Whitefield’s preaching
in her poem. Knowing Whitefield’s passionate form of preaching, one can picture
him crying out to the blacks in his audience, “Take him, ye Africans, he longs
for you.”
This must have been the case in one Philadelphia meeting where
Whitefield’s message left many blacks weeping and in awe. One black woman said
that he must have been in a trance and insisted that, “Jesus Christ must have
told him what to speak to the people or else he could not speak as he did”
(Hyatt, Pilgrim
and Patriots, 95).
Other Revivalists Target Blacks in Their Outreaches
Further south, Samuel
Davies, a Presbyterian minister who served as president of the College of New
Jersey (now Princeton University), gave
special attention to blacks, including slaves, during his time of
ministry in Virginia. He was greatly encouraged by their enthusiastic response
to the Gospel and wrote,
My principal
encouragement of late has been among the poor negro slaves; in the land of their slavery they have been brought into
the glorious liberty of the sons of God.
Davies not only
preached to blacks, both slave and free, he treated them as brothers and
sisters in Christ, inviting them to share in regular church observances including
the Lord’s Supper. In 1757, he wrote,
What little success I have lately had, has been chiefly among
the extremes of Gentlemen and Negroes. Indeed, God has been remarkably working
among the latter. I have baptized 150 adults; and at the last sacramental
solemnity, I had the pleasure of seeing the table graced with sixty black faces
(Hyatt, Pilgrim
and Patriots, 95).
Back to the north, Gilbert Tennent was delighted that during a
preaching tour in Massachusetts, “multitudes were awakened, and several
received great consolation, especially among the young people, children, and
Negroes” (Hyatt, Pilgrim
and Patriots, 93). Jonathan Edwards, in his
account of the Awakening in his hometown of Northampton, mentions “several
Negroes” who appeared to have been truly born again.
Anti-Slavery Sentiments are Aroused
Whitfield has been criticized for not opposing the institution
of slavery. That is a valid criticism, but Whitfield saw his purpose to be in
getting people ready for the next world, not improving their lot in this one. He
preached in the light of eternity, and in his thinking, a slave on his way to
heaven was far better off than a king on his way to hell.
In this sense, Whitefield treated everyone the same. Rich and poor, slave and
free, male and female were all in the same predicament--guilty sinners before
God--with only one solution for all, that being faith in Jesus Christ. This had
a leveling effect on American society for tens of thousands, both black and
white, heard Whitefield preach and he became the most recognized figure in
Colonial America.
Whitefield's passion to reach American blacks with the gospel
breached racial barriers and opened the way for others to take the work of
racial reconciliation further, and they did. Historian, Benjamin Hart, has
noted, “Among the most ardent opponents of slavery were ministers, particularly
the Puritan and revivalist preachers.”
These "ardent opponents of slavery" included the
followers of Jonathan Edwards who expanded on his idea of the essential dignity
of all created beings and applied it to the blacks of Colonial America.
Samuel Hopkins, for example, who had been personally tutored by
Edwards, sent a pamphlet to every member of the Continental Congress asking how
they could complain about “enslavement” to Great Britain and overlook the
enslavement of so many blacks in the colonies. Noll says,
In this attack on slavery Hopkins was joined by other followers
of Edwards, including Levi Hart in Connecticut, Jacob Green in New Jersey, and
Edwards’ own son, Jonathan, Jr., who was also a minister in Connecticut.
Blacks Join the Patriotic Protests
The Awakening thus led to the humanizing of blacks and a general
awakening to the evils of slavery. It also led to the emergence of new, black
congregations and preachers, among those who were enslaved and those who were free. This then
led to many blacks identifying with the struggle for freedom from Great Britain
and becoming part of the patriotic protests, especially in New England.
For example, at the time of the Boston Massacre in April of
1770, a large black man, Crispus Attucks, was one of the leaders in the
protests against the occupation of Boston by British troops. An escaped slave
who had settled in Boston, he was one of those of those killed that day by
British soldiers. A poem written in his honor refers to him as,
Leader and voice that
day;
The first to defy and the first to die.
The first to defy and the first to die.
The positive ripples from the Awakening also opened the way for
blacks to later serve in the Revolutionary War. David Barton has provided
documentation showing that numbers of blacks were given honorable discharges
and pensions, and some were honored with complete military funerals for their
service in the War.
The anti-slavery sentiments unleashed by the Awakening were so
strong in the North that when separation with Great Britain came in 1776,
several states, including Pennsylvania, Massachusetts, Connecticut, Rhode
Island, Vermont, New Hampshire and New York, immediately took steps to formally
abolish slavery, something they could not do under King George III.
Although there was more resistance in the South, where a
monetary motive prevailed, the anti-slavery sentiments released by the Great
Awakening flowered into the abolition movement of the next century, which, as
Dr. Timothy Smith has shown, had its roots in American revivalism, starting
with the First Great Awakening (Hyatt, Pilgrims and Patriots, 97).
The Great Awakening Moved America in the Right Direction
The impact of the Great Awakening led to most Americans,
especially in the North, abhorring slavery. It also put those in the South on
the defensive. In their heart of hearts, they knew they were wrong even as they
struggled to produce moral arguments defending the institution.
By the time of the Constitutional Convention in 1787, most
Founders had come to agree with John Adams who said,
Every measure of prudence . . . ought to be
assumed for the eventual total extirpation of slavery from the United States. I
have throughout my whole life held the practice of slavery in abhorrence.
Yet, despite the impact of the Awakening, the
slavery issue was not settled at the nation’s founding. The institution had
become so entrenched and entangled with the economy and culture of the South
that the Founders were unwilling to risk a fragmented Union by outlawing the
institution. Sowell has said,
Deciding that slavery was wrong was much
easier than deciding what to do with millions of people from another continent, of another race, and without any
historical preparation for living as free citizens in a society like that of
the United States, where they were 20 percent of the population. It is clear
from the private correspondence of Washington, Jefferson, and many others that
their moral rejection of slavery was unambiguous, but the practical question of
what to do now had them baffled. That would remain so for more than half a
century.
To their credit, the Founders outlawed slavery
in the newly formed Northwest Territory and in any new states to be formed.
They also worded the Constitution in such a way that the rights guaranteed
therein could not be denied to anyone based on race or skin color.
Nonetheless, their concessions to the southern
states sparked further “moral outrage” and warnings of Divine judgement. This “moral outrage”
would flower into the abolition movement of the next century and finally lead
to the end of slavery in America, but only after another Great Awakening and a Civil War.
Concluding Thought
This is a fact: It was a revitalized Christianity that provided
the spiritual and moral forces that would eventually bring an end to slavery in
America. Yes, it was the Great Awakening that produced the unique “moral outrage” of which Sowell and Williams have written.
This is so because only true Christianity changes hearts and produces a
people characterized by peace and compassion. This is why it will take more
than political and legislative activism to resolve racial tensions in contemporary
America.
We ought to take a lesson from history and pray for another Great
Awakening across the land. We should recall the words of Samuel Adams, known as
the Father of the American Revolution, who as governor of Massachusetts,
proclaimed a Day of Prayer in 1795 in which he asked the people to,
Pray that the peaceful and glorious
reign of our Divine Redeemer may be known throughout the whole family of
mankind.
This article was derived from Dr. Eddie Hyatt's book, Pilgrims and Patriots, which is available from
Amazon and his website at www.eddiehyatt.com. Dr. Hyatt has also
produced a PowerPoint presentation called “America Reawakening” that he shares
in churches, schools, colleges and other venues. To contact him, send an email
to dreddiehyatt@gmail.com.
Hi! May I suggest that the colonial preaching of the Gospel did not result in the 'humanization of the negros', but rather it dispelled the delusion of the dehumanization of all undervalued persons and creatures?
ReplyDeleteMay I also suggest that Samuel Adams' prayer was for God's Kingdom to come worldwide, not just an awakening of dead or slumbering church people?
ReplyDeleteRespectfully, you are missing a lot of information that runs counter to your argument. Conservativism and evangelicalism were timid accomodaters of the status quo and often used the Bible to certify enslavement. There were moments of moral outrage against slavery but the history suggests that church, especially in the south, was more often an enemy to black freedom than a friend and advocate.
ReplyDeleteSuperbly written article, if only all bloggers offered the same content as you, the internet would be a course in miracles free audiobook
ReplyDelete