In a recent Sightings column, Martin E. Marty writes about American religion during the Great Depression, and what we can learn from it:
It is too soon to know how this recession-depression will work out for religious institutions and ideas. While watching and waiting, I decided to do what so many do: compare today to the Great Depression of the 1930s. I had explored religious roles and responses in my The Noise of Conflict: 1919-1941, the second volume in my Modern American Religion (University of Chicago, 1991). If we repeat in any way—but who says we will, or must?—what happened then, there is not a lot of cheer to be spread. I particularly relied on Samuel C. Kincheloe’s 1937 Research Memorandum on Religion in the Depression, an extensive, judicious, realistic survey done for the Social Science Research Council by a Chicago Theological Seminary (then Congregational) professor. Like so many other secular and mainstream Protestant analysts, he did not pay much attention to what was prospering when nothing else was: fundamentalism.
Some leaders hoped and prayed for religious revivals, none of which erupted. “There has been much emphasis on the belief that what society needs is religion,” Kincheloe reported, and I observed, “but society evidently did not think so.” Money problems limited church efforts to serve the poor, whose numbers grew exponentially. At the same time, deep believers within all congregations and denominatins [sic] “did not fall away from faith merely because of economic trauma.” The Christian Century editorialized, with a view on the past: “Did people not address this Depression religiously because for once they did not think it occurred under the providence of God? The editorial conclusion: this may have been “the first time men have not blamed God for hard times.” If that was true in 1935, it seems to be true today, too. There are accusers, accused, and commentators on all hands today, but one seldom hears that all the dealings, many of them now seen as greedy at best and criminal at worst, were anything but the results of individual and corporate folly and corruption. This time again, citizens can’t blame God for getting them into this, and are trying to find God-ly ways to get out of it…together.
Read the full article here.