Description
Book SynopsisSheds new light on the political motivations of homefront clergymen during wartime, revealing how and why the Civil War stands as the US's first concerted campaign to check the ministry's freedom of religious expression.
Trade ReviewTimothy L. Wesley contributes to what is becoming a deep and diverse literature on religion in the Civil War era. . . . Wesley adds nuance to this important discussion with a keen sense of change over time and regional variation." -
Journal of Southern History"Timothy L. Wesley's useful new study examines the ways in which the clergy, laity, denominational bodies, and national authorities, responded when a minister addressed civil and political issues from behind the sacred desk. This narrow focus represents a welcome addition to a field in which it would be easy to conclude that religion was simply in the Civil War era ether—everywhere and nowhere at the same time...a fine contribution to our understanding of religion and the Civil War, and to our understanding of the clergy's place in that struggle." -
The Journal of Southern Religion"The strongest element of the book analytically is Wesley's effort to create a taxonomy of preacher politics. . . .
The Politics of Faith during the Civil War is a noteworthy contribution for relentlessly returning the religious class to its rightful place at the political center of everything that brought the war on and fought it through." -
Civil War History"[A] thought-provoking and ambitious volume. . . . This book uncovers a previously overlooked chapter in the history of civil liberties in wartime." -
Reviews in American History"[Wesley's] wide-ranging scope, extensive research, and at times downright contrarianism make his book not only an intriguing read, but also an important contribution to the ever-expanding scholarship on the American Civil War's religious history." -
Fides et Historia"[A] fine volume….Anyone interested in nineteenth-century American religion should read Wesley's work." -
Church History"Wesley's book is an important contribution to our understanding of religion's significant influence on the home front during the war." -
Civil War Book Review"In taking up this topic, Wesley has offered one of the most helpful studies to date for why religion mattered in the lively and often rough-and-tumble political world of the Civil War." -
Civil War Monitor"
The Politics of Faith During the Civil War is an excellent book about the influence of home-front ministers during the Civil War era, every bit as interesting a subject as the oft-covered role of ministers as chaplains to the opposing armies...Highly recommended." -
Civil War Medicine and Writing"Wesley has...made an original contribution to our understanding of the war years through his study of ministers on all sides of the conflict." -
American Catholic Studies