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Do They Still Sing 'Amazing Grace' in Dixie?


Article # : 13435 

Section : CULTURE
Issue Date : 9 / 1987  6,494 Words
Author : James J. Thompson, Jr.
James J. Thompson, Jr., is the book review editor for The New Oxford Review. He has written three books: Tried as by Fire: Southern Baptists and the Religious Controversies of the 1920s (Mercer University Press, 1982); Christian Classics Revisited (Ignatius Press, 1983); and Fleeing the Whore of Babylon: A Modern Conversion Story (Christian Classics, Inc., 1986). He has coedited (with George M. Curtis III) The Southern Essays of Richard M. Weaver (Liberty Press, 1987).

       The air crackles with energy and optimism at the Southern Baptist "Vatican" in Nashville, Tennessee. Baptists today boast of their loosely knit denominational structure: individualistic, democratic - each congregation its own master. Baptists shun hierarchy and organization. Or at least they say they do. The massive Sunday School Board headquarters in downtown Nashville - locus of many of the denomination's enterprises - belies the cherished self-image of a simple, God-fearing people who disdain the trappings of denominationalism.
       
        Admittedly, one can still discern traces of their humble rural roots. Scratch an impeccably groomed Baptist official, and you glimpse his granddaddy, a grizzled old farmer, traipsing behind a mule on a hardscrabble forty acres in middle Tennessee. Enter a well-appointed Baptist church in the Nashville suburbs on a Sunday morning and you catch resonances of the rough-hewn religiosity that coursed through the weathered clapboard churches that dotted the villages and countryside of an earlier South. Southern Baptists have not forgotten their origins; yet they have prospered, exploded in numbers, and invested their future in boards, agencies, committees, and sophisticated corporate organization. They have, as one hears in these parts, moved uptown.
       
        If you walk across Lower Broad in downtown Nashville, you leave the Baptist Vatican and enter the Methodist "Mecca." The Methodist Publishing House occupies an entire city block of prime real estate, a multimillion-dollar industry the location of which evidences the Methodists' refusal to permit the Baptists to hog center stage. Two can play the game or rich-and-powerful ... (1904 of 40043 Characters)
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