
Lincoln's Sacred Effort: Defining Religion's Role in American Self-Government
Author(s): Lucas E. Morel (Author)
- Publisher: Lexington Books
- Publication Date: 19 Jan. 2000
- Language: English
- Print length: 270 pages
- ISBN-10: 0739101064
- ISBN-13: 9780739101063
Book Description
Editorial Reviews
Review
Morel”s work draws considerably―as he acknowledges―from Crisis of the House Divided, my book on the Lincoln-Douglas debates published forty years ago, especially from the chapters on the Lyceum and Temperance speeches. However, Morel gives a thoroughly fresh reading of those speeches, and discovers in them dozens of biblical references, allusions, and paraphrases that I had not noticed or identified. In addition, he locates these texts within the framework of church history and church controversycontemporaneous with Lincoln. How Lincoln negotiated his way amidst sectarian differences, enlisting religious dispositions for non-sectarian political ends, especially in his Second Inaugural, is described with great sensitivity and great precision.I can say candidly that I learned a great deal from reading this book.. — Harry V. Jaffa, Philosophy Emeritus, Claremont McKenna College and Claremont Graduate School
Morel”s work draws considerably―as he acknowledges―from Crisis of the House Divided, my book on the Lincoln-Douglas debates published forty years ago, especially from the chapters on the Lyceum and Temperance speeches. However, Morel gives a thoroughly fresh reading of those speeches, and discovers in them dozens of biblical references, allusions, and paraphrases that I had not noticed or identified. In addition, he locates these texts within the framework of church history and church controversy contemporaneous with Lincoln. How Lincoln negotiated his way amidst sectarian differences, enlisting religious dispositions for non-sectarian political ends, especially in his Second Inaugural, is described with great sensitivity and great precision. I can say candidly that I learned a great deal from reading this book. — Harry V. Jaffa, Philosophy Emeritus, Claremont McKenna College and Claremont Graduate School
Wow! eBook


