The answer to your question is indeed all over the place in Frederick Douglass' Narrative -- from the comments in the preface to the parody of church music at the end -- and while I agree completely with akannan that you will need to do the legwork to identify the quotations, I want to share a legitimate strategy that you may not yet know about or use: the full text of this slave narrative is available online (see the two links below for sample sites housing the text).
Electronic texts are searchable, which means that you after you access the electronic text you can use the "Find on this page" command (under "Edit" in the menu of Internet Explorer) or simply the keyboard command "CTRL-f" to open up the search function. Type in one keyword at a time -- such as "Christ" (which will probably also find "Christian") and "religion" -- and you'll find every occurance of each word in the electronic text.
You will still need to locate page numbers in order to put the quotations in MLA format, and page numbers are not often given in electronic texts. The chapters in Douglass' text are short, so you may find yourself reviewing your print copy of the book (by chapter) to find out the exact page number for the relevant quotations in the chapters that you have searched electronically.
Selective searching of electronic texts is nowhere close to the same thing as reading the full text, of course. I recommend using this strategy after you have already read the text in full one time through but don't necessarily want to read the entire text again just to find relevant quotations. Douglass' story is amazingly good, and if you simply search instead of read, you're really not gaining anything through the assignment.
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