The Color of Compromise : The Truth about the American Church's Complicity in Racism
The Color of Compromise : The Truth about the American Church's Complicity in Racism
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Author(s): Tisby, Jemar
ISBN No.: 9780310597261
Pages: 256
Year: 201901
Format: Trade Cloth (Hard Cover)
Price: $ 24.94
Status: Out Of Print

IntroductionThe Color of Compromise uses history to present a jarring picture of how the American church has helped create and maintain racist ideas and practices. In doing so, readers begin to realize just how far back and deep the problem of race and the church goes. But the book doesn't just look backwards; it looks forward to a future of improved race relations and a more racially inclusive church. But because Christians have worked so hard in the past to divide and separate based on race, believers today will have to work even harder to foster equity and unity. The introduction explains the book's premise by unpacking its title and its relation to King's "I Have a Dream" speech where he uses the phrase "the fierce urgency ofnow."Chapter 1- Making Race: The Colonial EraIn the early years of the European colonization of North America, the racial caste system had not yet been rigidly defined. Indigenous people, Europeans, and Africans ranged from free, to indentured servants, to slaves for life. During this period, white Christians grappled with questions of evangelism.


If a person of colorconverted to the faith did he or she become an equal? Should slaves who were now Christians be granted freedom? This chapter explores how Christians in America began to excuse racialized slavery and even participated in its formation during the seventeenth century.Chapter 2- Christian Slave Owners: Antebellum EraOver time, slavery became increasingly common and regulated in North America. Christians became slave owners and often failed to see the contradiction between their faith and owning people as property. Growing denominations (like Baptists) punted the question of slavery to the civil authorities and nationally known Christian leaders (like Jonathan Edwards) held slaves without apparent contradiction. This chapter details how racism became staples of American Christianity as slavery became an American institution during the late seventeenth and early eighteenth centuries.Chapter 3- With God on Our Side: The Civil War EraBy the mid-eighteenth century, the nation faced a sectional conflict about the perpetuation of slavery that would end in a bloody war. The Civil War pitted North against South and those who wanted a country that maintained slavery against those who, for various motives, did not. Both Union and Confederate forces thought God was on their side.


This chapter explains how Christians in the Confederacy sanctified slavery and tried to make racism sound righteous.Chapter 4- Taking Back the South: The Lost Cause, Redemption and Jim CrowAfter losing the Civil War, white southerners had to find ways to explain their defeat. They couched their plight in theological terms that made their side seem like tragic victims. Although their cause had been just, they had to suffer through the "Lost Cause." But Christians who wanted a return to white racial dominancedubbed their crusade "Redemption" as they attempted to return to what they lost. They recast slavery in the form of Jim Crow and used the Bible to defend the inferiority and segregation of black people. This chapter shows how Christians processed the Civil War and adapted their beliefs of racial superiority in the yearsfrom 1865 to 1945.Chapter 5- On the Wrong Side of the Fight for Equality: The Civil Rights EraBy the middle of the twentieth century, African Americans and their allies became increasingly public with their protests of Jim Crow inequality and brutality.


They began boycotting, marching, and rallying for their basic civil rights. Instead of siding with African Americans, however, conservative white Christians resisted their efforts. Both silence and outspoken opposition to these protests characterized Christians in this period. They vigorously obstructed integration and often populated racist organizations like the Ku Klux Klan and the Citizens' Council. This chapter details the tumultuous Civil Rights era from its rumblings in the 1940.


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