Intermingling architectural, cultural, and religious history, Louis
Nelson reads Anglican architecture and decorative arts as documents
of eighteenth-century religious practice and belief. In
The
Beauty of Holiness, he tells the story of the Church of England
in colonial South Carolina, revealing how the colony's Anglicans
negotiated the tensions between the persistence of
seventeenth-century religious practice and the rising tide of
Enlightenment thought and sentimentality.
Nelson begins with a careful examination of the buildings, grave
markers, and communion silver fashioned and used by early
Anglicans. Turning to the religious functions of local churches, he
uses these objects and artifacts to explore Anglican belief and
practice in South Carolina. Chapters focus on the role of the
senses in religious understanding, the practice of the sacraments,
and the place of beauty, regularity, and order in
eighteenth-century Anglicanism. The final section of the book
considers the ways church architecture and material culture
reinforced social and political hierarchies.
Richly illustrated with more than 250 architectural images and
photographs of religious objects,
The Beauty of Holiness
depends on exhaustive fieldwork to track changes in historical
architecture. Nelson imaginatively reconstructs the history of the
Church of England in colonial South Carolina and its role in public
life, from its early years of ambivalent standing within the colony
through the second wave of Anglicanism beginning in the early
1750s.