"This is a carefully researched, skillfully
interpreted, and provocative study that focuses on an important
subject. Murray's volume is one of a small number of first-rate
scholarly studies that are beginning to fill a gap in historians'
knowledge about and understanding of the ways in which the United
States' major religious institutions were affected by the Civil
Rights Movement."--Alfred A. Moss Jr.
In Methodists and the Crucible of Race, 1930-1975, Peter
C. Murray contributes to the history of American Christianity and
the Civil Rights movement by examining a national
institution--the Methodist Church (after 1968 the United
Methodist Church)--and how it dealt with the racial conflict
centered in the South. Murray begins his study by tracing
American Methodism from its beginnings to the secession of many
African Americans from the church and the establishment of
separate northern and southern denominations in the nineteenth
century. He then details the reconciliation and compromise of
many of these segments in 1939 that led to the unification of the
church. This compromise created the racially segregated church
that Methodists struggled to eliminate over the next thirty
years.
During the Civil Rights movement, American churches confronted
issues of racism that they had previously ignored. No church
experienced this confrontation more sharply than the Methodist
Church. When Methodists reunited their northern and southern
halves in 1939, their new church constitution created a
segregated church structure that posed significant issues for
Methodists during the Civil Rights movement.
Of the six jurisdictional conferences that made up the Methodist
Church, only one was not based on a geographic region: the
Central Jurisdiction, a separate conference for "all Negro annual
conferences." This Jim Crow arrangement humiliated African
American Methodists and embarrassed their liberal white allies
within the church. The Supreme Court's Brown v. Board of
Education decision awakened many white Methodists from their
complacent belief that the church could conform to the norms of
the South without consequences among its national membership.
Murray places the struggle of the Methodist Church within the
broader context of the history of race relations in the United
States. He shows how the effort to destroy the barriers in the
church were mirrored in the work being done by society to end
segregation. Immensely readable and free of jargon, Methodists
and the Crucible of Race, 1930-1975, will be of interest to a
broad audience, including those interested in the Civil Rights
movement and American church history.
About the Author
Peter C. Murray is Professor of History at Methodist College in
Fayetteville, North Carolina.
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