Albert J. Raboteau, retired Princeton University Professor of Religion, wrote an exceptional book on the religious lives of African American slaves before the Civil War. Slave Religion: The "Invisible Institution" in the Antebellum South is a remarkable piece of work that examines how the faith of African Americans functioned under the institution of slavery in the Antebellum South. The subject of African American religion during this period was vastly understudied, leading Raboteau to shed light on the African American religious experience. This reveals the meaning behind the book’s subtitle, the “invisible institution” of the South, signaling the religion of slaves. The implications of this neglected field of research has created myths about African Americans and their past. This has led to distorted American history, because when African American history is ignored or underrepresented then American history is not accurate. Raboteau responded to questions about ways slave culture, as it relates particularly to religion, developed and changed during the antebellum period in the South. How did slaves live out their religion under the yoke of white control? The book focuses primarily on Protestantism as the dominant religious force during this time, while giving little attention to the impact of Catholicism, Islam, and even the folk religion of the slaves’ ancestral lands.
Raboteau structures his book in two sections. In the first section, he writes about first-hand accounts of how Africans practiced their “danced religions” and how the worship of African gods was appropriated through the saints leading to a syncretistic faith with Christianity at times. Raboteau then makes the claim that, “In the United States the gods of Africa died.” (P. 86) This is because black religion in the Caribbean and South America developed and grew but not in North America. Raboteau does not give an answer as to why this happened but states more research needs to be done in this area. In the last section of the book, Raboteau shows how the religious views and actions of blacks and whites played out in this antebellum period. He illustrates how the initial approach of catechizing slaves to conversion took a lot of time, and there were not a lot of conversions recorded in this period as opposed to the Great Awakening, where many slaves came to be baptized from these revivals. This led to the idea of plantation missions where missionaries were willing to work within the system of slavery as long as they could come to the plantations and disciple the slaves with the master’s approval. As the Civil War loomed closer and closer, Christianity had penetrated the slave community because most slaves had been American born at this time and there were not as many linguistic and cultural barriers to accepting the death and resurrection of Jesus for the salvation of their souls. It should be noted here that not all slaves accepted this belief or even considered Christianity as a viable religion. As some noted, “They said their masters and families were Bible Christians, and they did not want to be like them” (243). The book closes by asking if Christianity either encouraged docility under slave masters or promoted egalitarianism between the master and slave? While some have argued that the Bible teaches that slavery is a good thing, Raboteau offers another view that Christianity when practiced correctly, actually led to slaves and masters having “moments of genuine religious mutuality, whereby blacks and whites preached to, prayed for, and converted each other in situations where the status of master and slave was, at least for the moment, suspended” (314). In the conclusion of the book, the slave’s experience is compared to the Israelites as a chosen, peculiar people that God will eventually deliver from slavery.
This book gives a realistic picture of what slaves experienced. It demonstrated many different aspects of antebellum faith practiced by slaves. For example, Portuguese kidnappers are recorded as saying the slaves received “the greater benefit” of being subjected because they can die as Christians and not pagans, thereby receiving “eternal life” (95). This book establishes how slave religion shaped America and how American Protestantism shaped slave religion in the South. As noted earlier, Slave Religion should have engaged the faith of other religions on the slaves. Also missing was the representation of the experience of the African American slave women and how they found comfort in Christianity.