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Christianity And Baptism

Decent Essays

A central point of the reading is that Christianity created race. The author explains how Natives and Africans both understood and took advantage of the meanings of baptism to build their own communities and gain status in English communities. However, throughout time, laws were created to stop African slaves from gaining their freedom by stopping baptism and by not putting emphasis on English language proficiency. The author states that while law makers were committed to their spirituality they also, “recognized that the act of baptism depleted their captive workforce” (p. 99). Additionally, the author states that religion, and not physical appearance, was a more powerful way of categorizing people and moving between slavery and freedom. However, …show more content…

The Virginian legislature made two large moves when creating a law that both attempted to make sure that baptism was for true converts but also that enslaved people might not be capable of baptism at all; especially older slaves. Due to this, slave owners were exempt from pursuing Christian education and baptism for adult slaves and their actions show that they thought that slaves were innately incapable of Christianity. Consequently, the term hereditary hedenism become a primary ideology towards slaves. Even in the wake of the 1667 law that should have permitted baptism of slaves, Godwyn found that slave owners had ascribed bestial characteristics to slaves that created an ideological mechanism to protect their property from baptism and freedom. This ideology produced biblical theology that enforced the ideological and mechanical needs of the slave owners. By condeming slaves to hereditary hedenism and creating theology around it, slave owners used Christianity and baptism to uphold slavery thus creating the social construct of …show more content…

It is intended to show the liberation of one’s mind, body, and soul and an entrance into the continual sanctification of one’s mind, body and soul (1 Th. 5:23). However, Goetz shows that colonial slave owners rejected that Christ died for all (2. Cor. 5:15) and instead were more concerned about their financial gains and losses if they allowed African slaves to be freed from captivity. Even though the intent of most of the Christians of the time was to follow Christ, they were negatively influenced by their cultural context as they restricted physical sanctification. Due to that limitation, mental trauma continued and in addition, the slave owners limited emotional health and thus the minds of the slaves were personally and systemically held captive from sanctification. We see in history that the spirit and soul of the Black community were indeed justified and sanctified as we look at the Negro spirituals that enhance our faith today. In a way, we can see that God still worked for the good of those that love Him (Rom. 8:28) by working through Black captivity much like He worked through the Israelite captivity that we see explained throughout Jeremiah. That captivity led the Israelites into a place of lament where the Church was taught to lament. The people group that the enemy meant to kill, even kill through the Church (John 10:10), God redeemed and refined through

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