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Essay on Baldwin's View of Christianity

Decent Essays

In The Fire Next Time, James Baldwin addressed the problem of racism that existed in the early 1960s. He gives very powerful accounts of his life growing up in Harlem in the 1930s and 40s. Throughout the book he gives accounts of how whites, blacks, Christians, and Muslims all can be blamed for the racial tensions that existed in the early 1960s. While Baldwin spends much of the criticism on whites, Christians, and Jews, and their inability to give up their hold on the political, financial, and religions power of the country, he also holds the Black and Muslim communities responsible for not working harder to make things better. Baldwin does not feel that the Whites are totally accountable for the racial situation that exists in the …show more content…

He soon began preaching in this church, as his father did in his, and soon became a big influence. Because of this status, he achieved a sudden right to privacy and immunity from punishment. Most importantly, his father had little control over him. Baldwin was very enamored with the music and drama of the church. He enjoyed the attention he received while in the pulpit and truly believed that he was making a difference. He also had made a friend, Jesus, whom he felt, all the time, would never fail him.

Soon, Baldwin would go to high school, a predominately Jewish school, and would become educated. Not long afterwards, Christianity would lose its favor for the young man. Once again the idea of color, and the inferiority of his color especially, were being thrown back in his face. He suddenly was faced with the knowledge that Whites wrote the Bible, and that Blacks were descendants of Ham, who was cursed by God. This Jewish viewpoint suddenly changed Baldwin's view on religion. He realized that his ."..fate had been sealed forever, from the beginning of time"(36). He realized that this was not only what Christiandom believed, but also the way it behaved(36).

Being a little more educated, Baldwin realized that it was not the religion that was going to pull him out of the ghetto but the money that the church took from its

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