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91 pages, Paperback
First published May 1, 1969
Being a minister’s son in the Deep South in the early years of the twentieth century and growing up in a predominantly religious environment was my good fortune in life. [p.1]
When I asked him to tell me the reason for his entering the ministry instead of being a doctor or lawyer or storekeeper, he was evasive and had little to say, probably thinking I was not old enough then to understand a full explanation. The only thing Ira Sylvester would tell me was that he had studied for the ministry because his mother had asked him to do so. [p.3]
a recollection of the white Anglo-Saxon Protestant religious practices of the historical ’twenties and an observation of those of the contemporary ’sixties would serve to illuminate to some degree the churchly life of the two eras of the Deep South. [p.13]
Along the trains and footpaths in the ravines, out of sight of paved roads and highways, shacks and cabins tilt and sag and rot on the verge of collapse in the shadow of the green summer thatch of white oaks and black walnuts. The faces of the young people are blank with despair and the voices of the old people are saying that all is lost and tomorrow will be like yesterday and today – unless it is worse. [p.30]
Folks like to listen to me preach. They like to hear about lying and fornicating and stealing the way I talk about it. One good member told me not long ago he’d never heard a real expert before tell about sinful things the way I do. [p.46]
He said people were going to worship something that was either spiritual or materialistic and, if they ceased to worship God as a symbol of morality and become addicted to orgiastic religion, the younger generation might be better off being encouraged to worship totem-poles. [p.65]
He riled many people, as a result, who had been conditioned by a provincial environment and intellectually retarded by inadequate education compounded by religious fantasy. [p.164]