[A History of American Christianity by Leonard Woolsey Bacon]@TWC D-Link book
A History of American Christianity

CHAPTER XVI
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That eminent leader among the Lutheran clergy, the Rev.Dr.Bachman, of Charleston, referred "that unexampled unanimity of sentiment that now exists in the whole South on the subject of slavery" to the confidence felt by the religious public in the Bible defense of slavery as set forth by clergymen and laymen in sermons and pamphlets and speeches in Congress.[278:2] The historian may not excuse himself from the task of inquiring into the cause of this sudden and immense moral revolution.

The explanation offered by Dr.Bachman is the very thing that needs to be explained.
How came the Christian public throughout the slave-holding States, which so short a time before had been unanimous in finding in the Bible the condemnation of their slavery, to find all at once in the Bible the divine sanction and defense of it as a wise, righteous, and permanent institution?
Doubtless there was mixture of influences in bringing about the result.

The immense advance in the market value of slaves consequent on Whitney's invention of the cotton-gin had its unconscious effect on the moral judgments of some.

The furious vituperations of a very small but noisy faction of antislavery men added something to the swift current of public opinion.

But demonstrably the chief cause of this sudden change of religious opinion--one of the most remarkable in the history of the church--was panic terror.


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