The Soul of Abraham Lincoln

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University of Illinois Press, 2005 - 407 pages
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Modern secularists have been reluctant to recognize Abraham Lincoln's deep spirituality, in spite of the fact that he was often known as "Father Abraham" and has been described as one of the most deeply religious presidents the country has ever seen. Yet for all of his familiarity with the Bible, his invocation of Providence, and of the Almighty, he did not actively participate in a church or lend his name and authority to a denomination.

After more than fifty years of hagiographic and contradictory accounts of Abraham Lincoln's life, William Barton stepped boldly into the bedlam of claims and counterclaims about Lincoln's religion. Armed with an enormous collection of Lincoln materials and his own strict evidentiary rules, Barton worked to avoid partisan politicking over Lincoln's legacy and instead to simply "lay bare the facts."

To enable a better examination of the vexed questions surrounding Lincoln's faith and religious principles, Barton gathered Lincoln's most important writing and speeches about religion, and topically and chronologically assembled testimonies by his friends, family, and associates, about the most important and most debated issues. This volume, Barton's first and most important work on Lincoln, is introduced by Michael Nelson who provides a history of the literature on Lincoln's religion, the historical context of Barton's writing, and the details of the method that made Barton's approach to this American icon such a distinctive success.

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Contents

THE CHRISTIANS DEFENCE
xiii
VESTIGES OF CREATION
xiv
OTHER FORMATIVE BOOKS
xv
CHITTENDEN AND CHINIQUY
xvi
THE BEECHER AND SICKLES INCIDENTS
xvii
BEHIND THE SCENES
xviii
FROM THE HOUSETOPS AND IN THE CLOSET
xix
THE RULES OF EVIDENCE
101
THE CREED OF ABRAHAM LINCOLN
291
EXTRACT FROM NEWTON BATEMANS LECTURE
303
IX
309
TWO HERNDON LETTERS CONCERNING LINCOLNS
336
THE CHRISTIANS DEFENCE
358
CHAPTER II
370
LINCOLN AND THE CHURCHES
377
ix
385

THE BATEMAN INCIDENT
114
THE LAMON BIOGRAPHY
128
THE REED LECTURE
135
THE HERNDON LECTURES LETTERS AND BIOGRAPHY
140
LINCOLNS BURNT BOOK
146
THE CONSTRUCTIVE ARGUMENT
260
BIBLIOGRAPHY
387
PAGE
399
INDEX
401
24
403
IOI 114 128 156 166 172 188 198 203 210
404
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About the author (2005)

William E. Barton was a minister at the First Congregational Church of Oak Park, Illinois, who began writing on Lincoln shortly before retiring from the pulpit. In the last ten years of his life, Barton produced eight substantial studies of the sixteenth president and was credited by Benjamin P. Thomas with ushering in the "modern, thoroughgoing, . . . realistic school" of Lincoln biography.

Michael Nelson is a professor of political science at Rhodes College.

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