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But proslavery advocates did not give ground on the treatment of slaves, let alone on whether the institution of slavery itself was immoral. Advocates of white supremacy certainly were affirmed in their beliefs by the 1857 Dred Scott decision in which the Supreme Court famously ruled that all African Americans were racially stigmatized and thus could be treated as “ordinary articles of merchandise.”17

      Southern Baptists and Racial Stigma in the Jim Crow Era

       Box 3.5

      Having operated a level of generality (and having shown that the implications of the Golden Rule are evaded by the assumption that African Americans are inferior), the author now wants to take a case study and provide a more detailed analysis. She turns to the SBC in the Jim Crow Era.

      In his dissent in the Plessy case in 1896, US Supreme Court Justice John Marshall Harlan wrote famously that although whites see themselves as the dominant race in America, in the view of the US Constitution, there is no such thing as a ruling class of citizens. He argued:

      Tearing down Jim Crow segregation went against the will of southern Protestant denominations like the SBC, which did very little to support African Americans’ full humanity or their civil rights. The religious support of legal segregation tore at the social fabric of democratic society and eliminated any possibility of national Christian unity on issues of race and racism. Not only did white Christians disagree about the morality of segregation, they also created further chasms between themselves and African American Christians.

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