Manopolus
Metaphorical Anomaly
I think you are making a mistake by trying to generalize from what you experience around there. Compared to the South it sounds downright "Free Thinking".
The Baptists of 17th and 18th century New England were a very different beast than those of the 19th century South. Unlike the Puritans, who were Congregationalists with a specific credo of central authority, and had come here to build a theocracy so they could make other people pay attention to them instead of ignoring their religious admonishments, the Baptist were a truly persecuted group in England and the rest of Europe.
Their beliefs were founded in the concept of individual worship and the following of faith.
The Baptists around here, which is to say the historic South, quite formally and deliberately split away from northern Baptists when they formed the Southern Baptist Convention in 1845. They did this because they felt that the proper interpretation of their religious beliefs supported slavery and white supremacy. There was nothing wishy-washy about it. That was their upfront purpose for the division.
Needless to say this put them hand-in-glove with the political machinery of the day, and that relationship continues even now.
One of the more ironic results of this is that keeping religion out of schools was a premise for which which Southern Baptists were strong supporters ... until around 1954. (Yeah, right about the time of Brown v. BOE. What a coinky-dink, eh?)
That's just it. They're not. Not down here in the Below the (Mason Dixon Line) Bible Belt.
If anything the opposite is true. The church-on-every-corner Southern Baptists (that's a proper name, not a description) define and maintain the political issues, and they do it based on their religious tenets. When churches which had been members of the SBC refused to go along with a recent set of declarations which included things like wives having to be subservient to their husbands those churches were promptly booted out of the Convention. Likewise ordaining women, and marrying gays.
This. coming from a group which splintered from the mainstream specifically because they believed that each congregation should be able to believe and worship in the manner they chose, without the oversight and control of a higher ranking organization.
Ironic, isn't it.
Politicians around here don't hijack the religious. It's entirely the other way around. Very vocal conservative fundamentalist religious leaders set the agenda which the politicians purportedly on the right have to follow if they want to make it out of the primaries. (Or mebbe even into them in the first place).
This is taken as serious stuff around here, and if anything the fervor is getting worse as they see the general tide of public discourse and opinion passing them by in less intolerant parts of the country.
(Damned Yankees!)
Hmm...
Okay. I guess I don't know the intermediate history much. I lived in Texas (Beaumont area) for three years and worked in many Southern states during that time, but I'll have to admit that I never saw the inside of a church down there. I did get invited to quite a few (particularly by Pentacostals), but I wasn't particularly interested. I was also on the road too much (due to work) to really get to know much of anybody.
Anyway, yeah... I suppose it does exist, but that's not the whole of the religion... just the worst part of it. It's sort of the "Southern Gothic Horror" part of the religion. The only notable influence from that here at the Northern border of Kansas is not from the churches, but from right-wing media, as far as I've been able to tell. We're still considered part of The Bible Belt though, last I knew (probably depending on who you ask).
Last edited: