Lincoln's Christianity
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- $25.99
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- $25.99
Publisher Description
The Changing Role of Faith in the Life of the Sixteenth President of the United States
After listening to Abraham Lincoln’s second inaugural address, many in the audience were stunned. Instead of a positive message about the coming Union victory, the president implicated the entire country in the faults and responsibility for slavery. Using Old Testament references, Lincoln explained that God was punishing all Americans for their role in the calamity with a bloody civil war.
These were surprising words from a man who belonged to no church, did not regularly attend services, and was known to have publicly and privately questioned some of Christianity’s core beliefs. But Lincoln’s life was one with supreme sadness—the death of his first fiancee, the subsequent loss of two of his sons—and these events, along with the chance encounter with a book in Mary Todd’s father’s library, The Christian’s Defense, are all part of the key to understanding Lincoln’s Christianity. Biblical quotations soon entered his speeches—a point noted by Stephen Douglas in their debates—but it is unclear whether Lincoln’s use of scripture was a signal that American politicians should openly embrace religion in their public lives, or a rhetorical tool to manipulate his audience, or a result of a personal religious transformation. After his death both secular and religious biographers claimed Lincoln as one of their own, touching off a controversy that remains today.
In Lincoln’s Christianity, Michael Burkhimer examines the entire history of the president’s interaction with religion—accounts from those who knew him, his own letters and writings, the books he read—to reveal a man who did not believe in orthodox Christian precepts (and might have had a hard time getting elected today) yet, by his example, was a person and president who most truly embodied Christian teachings.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
A workmanlike investigation of Lincoln asks a question that Americans have been debating for at least 150 years: was Lincoln a believing Christian? American history teacher Burkhimer (100 Essential Lincoln Books) argues that Lincolns beliefs changed over time. Though raised by devout parents, the young Lincoln was a skeptic. Then, in 1849, he read a work of Christian apologetics written by a Springfield, Illinois minister, and he became much more interested in Christianity. Still, Burkhimer says we cant quite call Lincoln an orthodox Christian; he read the Bible and believed Jesus death did atoning work, but he did not necessarily believe Jesus was equal to God. Burkhimers account is by turns eccentric and derivative: his reading of the Second Inaugural address, a speech certainly animated by religious concerns, says little thats new, and his digressive suggestion that Lincoln was most attached to New Testament passages that coincided with Q, a hypothetical first-century text some New Testament scholars believe was the basis for the Gospels of Matthew and Luke, is a bit belabored. Overall, Burkhimer could have gone further in explaining why understanding Lincolns religiosity matters. Though serviceable, this study wont unseat Allen Guelzos Abraham Lincoln: Redeemer President as the most significant consideration of the 16th presidents religious life.