I recently read Thomas Kidd and Barry Hankins's Baptists in America: A History
(2015). I must have liked it, since my father, for many years a Baptist
pastor, says that I've tried to send him copies more than once. This
book deserves a proper review, perhaps paired with David Bebbington's Baptists Through the Centuries: A History of a Global People
(2010). But for today I want to use the book to think through what a
denominational history can accomplish. Here are a few thoughts about the
particular set of things the book is able to accomplish because it is a
denominational history.
- A denominational history can cross the color line.
This book is not filled with "Baptists" and "black Baptists," where
unmarked Baptists can be assumed to be white. Rather, Kidd and Hankins
are careful to write "white Baptists" when they mean white Baptists, and
write "black Baptists" when they mean black Baptists. A denominational
history is of course far from the only way to discuss race in the
context of religious history. Yet we can contrast the effects of the
decision to focus on Baptists with the decision to focus on, say,
evangelicalism. Recent histories of evangelicalism or fundamentalism
tend to take white Christians as their subjects, whether or not there
are good reasons
to question that demarcation, acknowledge the color line, and leave it
at that. If race is the single most-important category in U.S. history
(and it is), then our histories of U.S. religion ought to be able to
discuss race at least as well as this denominational history.
- A denominational history can describe denominational distinctives.
Baptists love their "Baptist distinctives," by which they mean a set
of beliefs, practices, and ecclesiastical structures which collectively
distinguish them from other Christians. (See the image for a common
formulation.) Kidd and Hankins quite rightly ask whether "the time is
long past when we can make broad claims about what makes Baptists
distinct" (251). Instead they organize their book around the argument
that Baptists are "insider-outsiders" in this sense: Baptists were once
at the very margins of church, law, and culture, and even though they
have since become in many places the leading denomination with enormous
political and cultural influence, they still regard themselves as an
embattled minority. This ought to be obvious to Baptists but it is not,
like a quirk in your family which you never noticed until your spouse
pointed it out. (For that matter, if the journalists and pundits who
talk about religion could learn this basic idea, then there might be a
little more light in public commentary.) The distinguishing features of
denominations are not the only thing worth understanding about American
religious history, but like the family you come from, they go a long way
towards explaining why different groups do what they do.
- A denominational history can be an institutional history.
- A denominational history can connect to American history.
You might think that a denominational history would tend to be
narrowly focused inward and not have a connection to the larger history.
Kidd and Hankins convincingly pin their narrative to the larger
narrative of U.S. history. Two examples: the sectional crisis over
slavery connects to the split between northern and Southern Baptists,
while the same denominational struggles were re-fought in the civil
rights era. Actually, there are so many connections here that I suspect
it was probably a constant problem for the authors to figure out how
much of general U.S. history they had to fill in for their readers.
- A denominational history can appeal to, you know, people who read books.
I don't know how many copies of this particular book Oxford is
moving; I hope a lot. But it seems to me that among the many potential
audiences for a work of history, one obvious one are the members of a
denomination themselves. (An interesting empirical question: which
denomination or religious group reads the most? Someone must have the
answer.) Framing a book to help its subjects understand themselves is a
worthy goal.
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