A Holy Baptism of Fire and Blood: The Bible and the American Civil War
Autor James P. Byrden Limba Engleză Hardback – apr 2021
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780190902797
ISBN-10: 0190902795
Pagini: 392
Dimensiuni: 236 x 165 x 38 mm
Greutate: 0.66 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States
ISBN-10: 0190902795
Pagini: 392
Dimensiuni: 236 x 165 x 38 mm
Greutate: 0.66 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States
Recenzii
A Holy Baptism of Fire and Blood...makes an important contribution to our understanding of how Americans used the Bible, and the roles that religious ideology played during the nation's bloodies conflict.
The book is a compelling read, clarifying a core element of American history and political and religious discourse, about the past but also about the present.
An eye-opening work for anyone wishing to truly understand the era...Essential.
It will no doubt contribute richly to a wealth of new studies at this intersection for years to come.
Thorough and evocative.
A Holy Baptism of Fire and Blood provides the most thorough discussion to date of the Bible's role in the Civil War.
All told -- and there is much in James Byrd's insightful narrative -- A Holy Baptism of Fire & Blood is a unique and powerful first-hand recounting of the Civil War's ebb and flow through the elastic prism of the book most familiar to nineteenth-century Americans.
James P. Byrd has gifted readers with another comprehensively chronicled and extensively analyzed survey of how Americans, in the country's earliest decades, were politically inspired by the Bible ... As his second invaluable contribution to the interpretive history of the Bible in America makes clear, it is Byrd's historically and spiritually attuned gifts that are beyond debate.
Byrd integrates his discussion of biblical references so well into their historical contexts that the book could almost be read as a history of the war itself.... A Holy Baptism of Fire and Blood provides the most thorough discussion to date of the Bible's role in the Civil War.
[Starred Review] This study of the use of the Bible at a critical time in the history of the United States can shed light on our own times, when the Bible is often used in a political tug-of-war.
[Starred Review] Civil War buffs and Scripture enthusiasts alike will find this book to be a uniquely worthwhile reading experience.
For readers accustomed to encountering the Civil War through battlefield accounts and secular biographies, Mr. Byrd's book is revelatory. No recent historian has shed more clarifying light on the spiritual equipment that bolstered soldiers' hearts and shaped their moral determination. Illuminating the faith they carried into battle along with their Bibles, as Mr. Byrd so eloquently does, helps us understand the inexplicable: how ordinary men by the tens and hundreds of thousands faced the imminent prospect of violent death or horrible maiming at Shiloh, Antietam, Cold Harbor and a thousand other battlefields that made the war the bloodiest in the nation's history.
Read the book, study the book, and reflect on the book. However, if nothing else, the Introduction and the Epilogue are a "must read" and worth the price of the book. Also, very helpful is the Appendix, "Biblical Citations in the Civil War Era." This is a landmark work to be read by any person seeking to understand the role of faith in military history and especially, during the American Civil War.
War is everywhere in the New Testament, as in the Old,' declared a Southern clergyman in 1863. The Bible was the most frequently cited book in both North and South during the Civil War. It served as a guide to explain the sacrifices and sufferings of soldiers and civilians. James Byrd's magisterial study helps the modern reader appreciate the all-encompassing role of scripture in America's most deadly experience.
This remarkable examination of the use of the Bible in the Civil War, North and South, represents a new departure in Civil War historiography. Through an innovative and exhaustive quantitative compilation and analysis of scriptural references, James Byrd highlights the most important Scriptures cited during the war and sets them in their broadest historical context. While the texts and interpretations varied widely in North and South, Byrd demonstrates in striking detail the truth of Lincoln's provocative assertion in his 2nd Inaugural that both sides "read the same bible and pray to the same God.
The book is a compelling read, clarifying a core element of American history and political and religious discourse, about the past but also about the present.
An eye-opening work for anyone wishing to truly understand the era...Essential.
It will no doubt contribute richly to a wealth of new studies at this intersection for years to come.
Thorough and evocative.
A Holy Baptism of Fire and Blood provides the most thorough discussion to date of the Bible's role in the Civil War.
All told -- and there is much in James Byrd's insightful narrative -- A Holy Baptism of Fire & Blood is a unique and powerful first-hand recounting of the Civil War's ebb and flow through the elastic prism of the book most familiar to nineteenth-century Americans.
James P. Byrd has gifted readers with another comprehensively chronicled and extensively analyzed survey of how Americans, in the country's earliest decades, were politically inspired by the Bible ... As his second invaluable contribution to the interpretive history of the Bible in America makes clear, it is Byrd's historically and spiritually attuned gifts that are beyond debate.
Byrd integrates his discussion of biblical references so well into their historical contexts that the book could almost be read as a history of the war itself.... A Holy Baptism of Fire and Blood provides the most thorough discussion to date of the Bible's role in the Civil War.
[Starred Review] This study of the use of the Bible at a critical time in the history of the United States can shed light on our own times, when the Bible is often used in a political tug-of-war.
[Starred Review] Civil War buffs and Scripture enthusiasts alike will find this book to be a uniquely worthwhile reading experience.
For readers accustomed to encountering the Civil War through battlefield accounts and secular biographies, Mr. Byrd's book is revelatory. No recent historian has shed more clarifying light on the spiritual equipment that bolstered soldiers' hearts and shaped their moral determination. Illuminating the faith they carried into battle along with their Bibles, as Mr. Byrd so eloquently does, helps us understand the inexplicable: how ordinary men by the tens and hundreds of thousands faced the imminent prospect of violent death or horrible maiming at Shiloh, Antietam, Cold Harbor and a thousand other battlefields that made the war the bloodiest in the nation's history.
Read the book, study the book, and reflect on the book. However, if nothing else, the Introduction and the Epilogue are a "must read" and worth the price of the book. Also, very helpful is the Appendix, "Biblical Citations in the Civil War Era." This is a landmark work to be read by any person seeking to understand the role of faith in military history and especially, during the American Civil War.
War is everywhere in the New Testament, as in the Old,' declared a Southern clergyman in 1863. The Bible was the most frequently cited book in both North and South during the Civil War. It served as a guide to explain the sacrifices and sufferings of soldiers and civilians. James Byrd's magisterial study helps the modern reader appreciate the all-encompassing role of scripture in America's most deadly experience.
This remarkable examination of the use of the Bible in the Civil War, North and South, represents a new departure in Civil War historiography. Through an innovative and exhaustive quantitative compilation and analysis of scriptural references, James Byrd highlights the most important Scriptures cited during the war and sets them in their broadest historical context. While the texts and interpretations varied widely in North and South, Byrd demonstrates in striking detail the truth of Lincoln's provocative assertion in his 2nd Inaugural that both sides "read the same bible and pray to the same God.
Notă biografică
James P. Byrd is Chair of the Graduate Department Religion and Associate Professor of American Religious History at Vanderbilt University Divinity School. He earned his master's degree at Duke University and his Ph.D. at Vanderbilt University. He is the author of Sacred Scripture, Sacred War: The Bible and the American Revolution (OUP, 2013).