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Pulpits of the Lost Cause: The Faith and Politics of Former Confederate Chaplains during Reconstruction: Religion and American Culture

Autor Steve Longenecker
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 20 feb 2023
A comparison of the faith and politics of former Confederate chaplains with intriguing insights about the evolution of their postwar beliefs and the Lost Cause
 
Pulpits of the Lost Cause: The Faith and Politics of Former Confederate Chaplains during Reconstruction is the first in-depth study of former chaplains that juxtaposes their religion and politics, thereby revealing important insights about the Lost Cause movement. Steve Longenecker demonstrates that while some former chaplains vigorously defended the Lost Cause and were predictably conservative in the pulpit, embracing orthodoxy and resisting religious innovation, others were unexpectedly progressive and advocated on behalf of evolution, theological liberalism, and modern biblical criticism.

Former Confederate chaplains embodied both the distinctive white, Southern, regional identity and the variation within it. Most were theologically conservative and Lost Cause racists. But as with the larger South, variation abounded. The Lost Cause, which Longenecker interprets as a broad popular movement with numerous versions, meant different things to different chaplains. It ranged from diehard-ism to tempered sectional forgiveness to full reconciliation to a harmless once-a-year Decoration Day ritual.

This volume probes the careers of ten former chaplains, including their childhoods, wartime experiences, Lost Cause personas, and theologies, making use of manuscripts and published sermons as well as newspapers, diaries, memoirs, denominational periodicals, letters, and the books they themselves produced. In theology, many former chaplains were predictably conservative, while others were unexpectedly broad-minded and advocated evolution, theological liberalism, and modern Biblical criticism. One former chaplain became a social-climbing Harvard progressive. Another wrote innovative, liberal theology read by European scholars. Yet another espoused racial equality, at least in theory if not full practice. Additionally, former chaplains often exhibited the fundamental human trait of compartmentalization, most notably by extolling the past as they celebrated the Lost Cause while simultaneously looking to the future as religious progressives or New South boosters. The stereotypical preacher of the Lost Cause—a gray-clad Bible thumper—existed sufficiently to create the image but hardly enough to be universally accurate.
 
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780817321499
ISBN-10: 0817321497
Pagini: 272
Ilustrații: 14 B&W FIGURES
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 33 mm
Greutate: 0.43 kg
Editura: University Of Alabama Press
Colecția University Alabama Press
Seria Religion and American Culture


Notă biografică

Steve Longenecker is professor of history emeritus at Bridgewater College, where he chaired the Department of History and Political Science. He is author of Gettysburg Religion: Refinement, Diversity, and Race in the Antebellum and Civil War Border North, and Shenandoah Religion: Outsiders and the Mainstream, 1716–1865.
 

Recenzii

“Honestly I was a little surprised myself at how much I enjoyed this work and how much I though of it. The reason, all this Lost Cause stuff is pretty well-worn territory . . . Much to my happy surprise, it makes for wonderful reading and the scholarship is excellent.”
—Paul Harvey, author of Through the Storm, Through the Night: A History of African American Christianity

Pulpits of the Lost Cause is expertly written, deeply researched, and an important contribution to the history of religion in the Civil War Era. It is also rich on the history of theology and denominational particulars, which is especially helpful in understanding how various distinctive positions could exist with the culture of Confederate apologia.”
—Luke E. Harlow, author of Religion, Race, and the Making of Confederate Kentucky, 1830–1880

 

Descriere

Compares the faith and politics of former Confederate chaplains during the Reconstruction period, and argues for some counterintuitive understandings of their beliefs and practices in the post-war period