2011-05-08T22:20:00-04:00
The development and strengthening of abolitionism in the North prior
to the US war of 1861 portrays an intensifying moral commitment there. Even
given the church schisms over slavery in the 1830s and 1840s, however,
Northern churches remained ambivalent about antislavery activism, as John R.
McKivigan shows in The War against Pro-Slavery
Religion. Many abolitionists believed that slavery could only be
successfully conquered by means of the church; they worked fervently in
their churches to shift them to a position of radical antislavery, but the
Northern churches resisted taking such a stand until the coming of the
war.
2011-05-06T11:05:00-04:00
In the first decades of the existence of the Unites States, leading to
the War of 1861, evangelical Christianity had largely imbued the nation's
citizenry with a sense that they were being guided providentially on a path
that would enable the country to usher in the Kingdom of God. With
The Civil War as a Theological Crisis, Mark A. Noll
describes the problems that were growing within this national understanding
as the war approached and then broke. He also hints at how this crisis may
have fundamentally changed religious attitudes throughout the
country.
2011-04-19T13:00:00-04:00
A major development that would contribute to the US war of 1861 was
the Southern decision to secede from the Union. Many historians see an array
of factors that led the South to this point. With Gospel of
disunion, Mitchell Snay argues that the moral and cultural
influence of religion contributed significantly to the South's growing sense
that it no longer could participate in the Union. In this book, Snay shows
how Southern religion ended up being a multipurpose tool in facilitating the
coming war: it identified points of conflict with the North while it also
helped to bring Southerners together.
2011-04-12T12:08:00-04:00
Religious institutions of the United States in the early and middle
nineteenth century closely followed and contributed to the larger national
efforts. Thus, as C. C. Goen describes in Broken Churches, Broken
Nation, the schisms in the dominant Protestant denominations in
the 1830s and the 1840s both foreshadowed and prepared for the more
destructive civil crisis to come.
2011-03-30T10:51:00-04:00
How did the United States perceive and justify itself with respect to
the crisis surrounding the War of 1861? In order to understand “the
moral tone of the victorious Union” (xii), James Moorhead reviews the
particular position of Northern “mainstream” Protestant
denominations in his book American Apocalypse.
2010-07-06T10:18:00-04:00
I recently finished reading A People's History of the
United States. In this article, I comment on the impact of
this book, including its strong impact on me as well as some of the
lessons that I learned about how resistance against oppression can
fail.