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Starred review from October 18, 2010
Apart from Charles Regan Wilson's classic Baptized in the Blood: The Religion of the Lost Cause, 1865–1920, Civil War historians have often neglected the story of religion in their chronicles of America's sectarian conflict. In this brilliant and groundbreaking book, University of Alabama historian Rable draws upon newspapers, sermons, diaries, letters, and journals to show that many people on both sides of the conflict turned to faith to help explain the war's causes, course, and consequences. Rable demonstrates that both Northerners and Southerners tried to make sense of the brutal war by thumbing through their Bibles, listening to their preachers, and interpreting battles as a fulfillment of a divine plan. Thus, Stephen Alexander Hodgman, a Northerner who had lived in the South for 32 years before the war, declared that God had not just sealed the doom of slavery, but that the war had helped prepare the way for the reign of Christ. Because of its thorough research and its chronicle of the lives of ordinary people, Rable's engrossing study of the role of religion in the Civil War will stand as the definitive religious history of America's most divisive conflict.
November 15, 2010
Rable (Southern history, Univ. of Alabama; The Confederate Republic) provides an excellent analysis of how Christians on both sides of the Civil War used religion to interpret their experience of the conflict. Analyzing hundreds of sermons, religious tracts, and articles, Rable shows how belief in Divine Providence informed how even the nominally religious viewed the war: if it was going well for your side it was because Providence favored the righteous, if poorly it was because Providence chastises those whom God loves. Christians, North and South, preached highly politicized sermons, with church and state creating a comprehensive if confused civic religion. Rable focuses his attention on the major Protestant and Catholic denominations but briefly considers Jewish and Mormon interpretations of the war as well. VERDICT There have been some excellent books on this topic, e.g., Mark A. Noll's The Civil War as a Theological Crisis, but Rable's book stands out for its accessibility and thorough research. The author shows himself to be an expert both on the controversies of the conflict and on the theological issues treated by the Christian denominations of the period. Highly recommended for readers of Civil War history or American religious history.--Michael Farrell, Reformed Theological Seminary Lib., Oviedo, FL
Copyright 2010 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.
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