Righteous strife How warring religious nationalists forged Lincoln's union

Richard Carwardine

Book - 2025

"The first major account of the American Civil War to give full weight to the central role played by religion, reframing the conflict through Abraham Lincoln's contentious appeals to faith-based nationalism. How did slavery figure in God's plan? Was it the providential role of government to abolish this sin and build a righteous nation? Or did such a mission amount to "religious tyranny" and "pulpit politics," in an effort to strip the Southern states of their God-given rights? In 1861, in an already fracturing nation, the tensions surrounding this moral quandary cracked the United States in half, and even formed rifts within the North itself, where antislavery religious nationalists butted heads with cons...ervative religious nationalists over their vision for America's future. At the center of this melee stood Abraham Lincoln, who would turn to his own faith for guidance, proclaiming more days of national fasting and thanksgiving than any other president before or since. These pauses for spiritual reflection provided the inspirational rhetoric and ideological fuel that sustained the war. In Righteous Strife, Richard Carwardine gives renewed attention to this crucible of contending religious nationalisms, out of which was forged emancipation, Lincoln's re-election, and his Second Inaugural Address. No understanding of the American Civil War is complete without accounting for this complex dance between church and state-one that continues to define our nation"--

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  • Holding together : a righteous nation
  • Pulling apart : a fracturing nation
  • Fast day January 1861 : nationalist riptides
  • Lincoln, nationality, and providence
  • Lincoln's fast day and antislavery nationalism 1861
  • Lincoln, religious nationalists, and emancipation 1862
  • Conservative attack and Lincoln's rejoinder 1861-63
  • Lincoln in the tempest of religious nationalisms 1863-64
  • The election of 1864
  • Emancipation and providence.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A study of the battle of schools of religious nationalism surrounding the Civil War and Reconstruction, and the lingering effect of that battle today. As Oxford historian Carwardine observes, the terms "religious nationalist" and "Christian nationalist" are "commonly synonymous with the conservative white evangelical Protestants who make up a core strength of the current Republican Party." There is historical cause for this narrowing of terms. In the antebellum era, as Carwardine chronicles, many nationalisms emerged. The southern strain, associated with the Anglican/Episcopal Church, took it as read that God was all in for slavery and that demonic forces were assembled against them. In the North, hardcore antislavery nationalists were largely outnumbered by more mainstream ideologies, dominated by Methodism, that advocated a more conservative approach. The abolitionists were, Carwardine writes, "predominantly Protestant in faith…[and] commonly defined their purposes in biblical terms: a specially chosen people, the citizens of the young country had a duty to apply the prophetic wisdom of the Old Testament and Christ himself by expunging the nation's greatest sin." Interestingly, Abraham Lincoln was largely indifferent to religion when he entered office, but the "providentialist" view that found him invoking "the better angels of our nature" became more militant as the fighting ground on. As Carwardine points out, many visions of Christian nationalism--and even some nationalisms that involved those excluded from the Protestant mainstream, namely Jews and Catholics--flourished and contended in the North, even as the South dug in its heels to advocate "white-supremacist, pro-slavery, and anti-authoritarian political positions." Those positions were articulated in the North as well, though, and after what Carwardine calls the postwar "breakup of antislavery religious nationalists' wartime coalition," they survived and, in the form of today's states' rights Christian nationalism, are much with us today. A fresh perspective on Civil War history and its resounding reverberations. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.