Origins of Southern Evangelicalism

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A01=Thomas J. Little
Author_Thomas J. Little
Baptists
Calvinism
Category=QRAX
Cotton Mather
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eq_isMigrated=2
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Evangelicalism
Evangelism
General Baptists
John the Baptist
Josiah Smith (clergyman)
Preacher
Presbyterian Historical Society
Protestant Reformers
Protestantism
Puritans
Separate Baptists
Seventh Day Baptists
Socinianism
Southern Baptist Convention
The gospel
Wesleyanism
William Sayle

Product details

  • ISBN 9781611172744
  • Weight: 456g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 228mm
  • Publication Date: 24 Oct 2013
  • Publisher: University of South Carolina Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
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During the late seventeenth century, a heterogeneous mixture of Protestant settlers made their way to the South Carolina lowcountry from both the Old World and elsewhere in the New. Representing a hodgepodge of European religious traditions, they shaped the foundations of a new and distinct plantation society in the British-Atlantic world. The Lords Proprietors of Carolina made vigorous efforts to recruit Nonconformists to their overseas colony by granting settlers considerable freedom of religion and liberty of conscience. Codified in the Fundamental Constitutions of Carolina, this toleration ultimately attracted a substantial number of settlers of many and varying Christian denominations.

In The Origins of Southern Evangelicalism, Thomas J. Little refutes commonplace beliefs that South Carolina grew spiritually lethargic and indifferent to religion in the colonial era. Little argues that pluralism engendered religious renewal and revival, which developed further after Anglicans in the colony secured legal establishment for their church. The Carolina colony emerged at the fulcrum of an international Protestant awakening that embraced a more emotional, individualistic religious experience and helped to create a transatlantic evangelical movement in the mid-eighteenth century.

Offering new perspectives on both early American history and the religious history of the colonial South, The Origins of Southern Evangelicalismcharts the regional spread of early evangelicalism in the too-often neglected South Carolina lowcountry--the economic and cultural centre of the lower southern colonies. Although evangelical Christianity has long been and continues to be the dominant religion of the American South, historians have traditionally described it as a comparatively late-flowering development in British America. Reconstructing the history of religious revivalism in the lowcountry and placing the subject firmly within an Atlantic world context, Little demonstrates that evangelical Christianity had much earlier beginnings in prerevolutionary southern society than historians have traditionally recognised.
Thomas J. Little is an associate professor of history at Emory and Henry College in Emory, Virginia, USA. His articles have appeared in Church History, Slavery and Abolition and the South Carolina Historical Magazine.

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