Race and the Roots of the Presbyterian Church in America, no. 2
[For an explanation of this series and the first post, see here.]
Even with Taylor and Bell's moderation on racial issues, there were those in conservative ranks who were determined to maintain racial integrity. W. A. Gamble, stated clerk of Central Mississippi Presbytery and sometime contributor to the Journal, was incensed by the recent softening on racial separation in the magazine since Taylor became editor. Board member John R. Richardson tried to calm Gamble down by writing, "We realize there has been some dissatisfaction. I am grateful, however, to tell you that I feel that in basic convictions all connected with the Journal have not changed nor will change in the future" on segregation. As a way of backing that reassurance, the Journal board issued a statement were they insisted "that the integrity of each race should be a matter of paramount importance and grave concern that much today which purports to be 'Christian race relations' has nothing to do with Biblical Christianity but works toward the destroying of racial integrity as it has developed in the Providence of God." As a result, the board reaffirmed "voluntary segregation in churches, schools, and other social relationships," which was all for the "highest interests of the races." In fact, "forced interracial social relationships, rather than being the ideal to which the church should work, are actually compounding the problems they seek to solve. Racial integrity is something to be preserved, not broken down."[1]
Even while defending racial integrity, southern Presbyterian conservatives valued social order even more. Violence, whether defending segregation or promoting integration, was unacceptable. In 1961, East Alabama Presbytery declared itself against the mob violence that engulfed the Freedom Riders in Birmingham and Montgomery: "We express our deep regret and emphatic disapproval of mob violence for whatever cause." Likewise, Nelson Bell was appalled by the lawlessness on the part of both sides in Birmingham in 1963. "One of our chief concerns is the effect these demonstrations are having on young people, both Negro and white," he declared. "Many white boys and girls, encouraged no doubt by their parents, have participated in counter demonstrations involving insults and violence. At the same time many Negro young people are being led into a psychological blind-alley--following the idea that 'rights' can be secured by mob action." Not mob violence, but adherence to the law was the way forward: "where laws perpetuate injustices, they must be changed."[2]
[1] John R. Richardson to W. A. Gamble, 12
August 1960 and 15 August 1960, both in L. Nelson Bell Papers, Box 69, folder
13, Billy Graham Center, Wheaton College, Wheaton IL; "Journal Day Attracts
Throng of Supporters," PJ (31 August 1960): 5.
[2] "Presbytery Expresses Regret Over
Incidents," PJ (14 June 1961): 22; L.
Nelson Bell, "A Plea for Communication," PJ
(26 June 1963): 8. On the Freedom Rides, see Raymond Arsenault, Freedom Riders: 1961 and the Struggle for
Racial Justice (New York: Oxford University Press, 2006). It is note-worthy
that the moderator of the PCUS distanced himself from the March on Washington
in August 1963 for fear that "mass demonstrations...often generated race hatred
and served mostly to gratify radical extremists" ("Churches' Part in March a
Mistake Says McCorkle," PJ (11
September 1963): 19.
[3] "Assembly Endorses 'Civil Rights' Action," PJ (12 May 1965): 7; G. Aiken Taylor,
"Evaluating the 105th Assembly," PJ
(12 May 1965): 14; L. Nelson Bell, "Danger Signals," PJ (29 September 1965): 15; Bell, "The Road to Lawlessness," PJ (24 August 1966): 15; Brice T.
Dickson, "What About Civil Disobedience?" PJ
(14 June 1967): 12; Samuel T. Harris, Jr., "The Problem of Civil Disobedience,"
PJ (6 December 1967): 8-10.
[4] G. Aiken Taylor, "The Heart of the Matter," PJ (11 March 1964): 10; [Leonard
Lowrey,] "The Church and Its Purpose," Hattiesburg
American (22 February 1964). For more on this historic debate, see Robert
Patrick Rayner, "On Theological Grounds: Hattiesburg Presbyterians and the Civil
Rights Movement," (M.A. thesis: University of Southern Mississippi, 2009),
55-67. An account of the 1963-64 Hattiesburg voter registration movement can be
found in Mark Newman, Divine Agitators:
The Delta Ministry and Civil Rights in Mississippi (Athens: University of
Georgia Press, 2004), 46-67.