In the first comprehensive treatment of the role of churches in the processes that led to the American Civil War, C.C. Goen suggests that when Presbyterian, Methodist, and Baptist churches divided along lines of North and South in the antebellum controversy over slavery, they severed an important bond of national union. The forebodings of church leaders and other contemporary observers about the probability of disastrous political consequences were well-founded. The denominational schisms, as irreversible steps along the nation's tortuous course to violence, were both portent and catalyst to the imminent national tragedy. Caught in a quagmire of conflicting purposes, church leadership failed and Christian community broke down, presaging in a scenario of secession and conflict the impending crisis of the Union. As the churches chose sides over the supremely transcendent moral issue of slavery, so did the nation. Professor Goen, an eminent historian of American religion, does not seek in these pages the "causes" of the Civil War. Rather, he establishes evangelical Christianity as "a major bond of national unity" in antebellum America. His careful analysis and critical interpretation demonstrate that antebellum American churches -- committed to institutional growth, swayed by sectional interests, and silent about racial prejudice -- could neither contain nor redirect the awesome forces of national dissension. Their failure sealed the nation's fate. - Publisher.
In Broken Church, Broken Nation, Mr. Cordner will show * How our founding fathers brought forth this country to honor and live for God, and the sacrifice and suffering that ensued in standing for Him * What it takes to have a true spiritual ...
This is the same lie that deceived Eve in the garden of Eden, which led to the fall of man. The purpose of this writing is to restore a biblical worldview that has been lost within the twenty-first-century American Christian church.
In this book you will discover: - The true source of America's greatness--proven by all History - The connection between our dying churches and our falling nation - Why American Christians are mostly to blame - The One and Only cure for the ...
A community is a multiplication of families and a nation is a multiplication of communities and this book addresses some of the major problems families are facing and it presents viable solutions to those problems.
Michael h. B. Cunningham to wife, oct. 3, 1863, Cunningham letters. 26. shattuck, Shield and Hiding Place, 18. 27. ... Based on the recent work of David herbert Donald, Mark noll, Allen C. Guelzo, ronald C. White, and steven Woodworth, ...
The book conveys a sense of the liveliness and creativity of the ongoing theological debates. Each chapter concludes with a short bibliography of recent scholarship for further reading.
As the Republican editors of The Agitator (Wellsboro, Pennsylvania) put it early in the war, the Union cause was sacred, ... rebellion we want men who feel the principles at stake, and appreciate the holy cause for which they fight.
C. Eric Lincoln and Lawrence H. Mamiya, The Black Church in the AfricanAmerican Experience (Durham, NC, 1990), chap. 7. 9. William H. Montgomery, Under Their Own Vine and Fig Tree: The AfricanAmerican Church in the South, 1865-1900 ...
... 278 , 280 Mahan , Asa , 235 Mahican Indians , 105 Maier , Paul , 412 Maier , Walter , 412 , 436 Maillard , Abbé , 73 Makemie , Francis , 68-69 , 90 Malone , Michael , 418 Mamiya , Lawrence H. , 218 , 362 , 469 , 479 , 496 , 500 Mann ...
Individual Baptists risked the wrath of their home congregation whether visiting Methodist or Presbyterian ... An issue largely confined to white members, non-attendance discipline cases indicated a basic dichotomy between black and ...