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In God's Presence

Chaplains, Missionaries, and Religious Space during the American Civil War

In God's Presence

Chaplains, Missionaries, and Religious Space during the American Civil War

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Hardback

£44.00

Publisher: University Press of Kansas
ISBN: 9780700627660
Number of Pages: 264
Published: 20/02/2019
Width: 16 cm
Height: 23.6 cm
When thousands of young men in the North and South marched off to fight in the Civil War, another army of men accompanied them to care for these soldiers' spiritual needs. In God's Presence explores how these two cohorts of men, Northern and Southern and mostly Christian, navigated the challenges of the Civil War on battlefields and in military camps, hospitals, and prisons.

In wartime, military clergy—chaplains and missionaries—initially attempted to replicate the idyllic world of the antebellum church. Instead they found themselves constructing a new religious world—one in which static spaces customarily invested with religious meaning, such as houses and churches, gave way to dynamic sacred spaces defined by clergy to suit changing wartime circumstances. At the same time, the religious beliefs that soldiers brought from home differed from the religious practices that allowed them to endure during wartime. With reference to Civil War soldiers' diaries, letters, and memoirs, this book asks how clergy shaped these practices; how they might have differed from camp to battlefield, hospital, or prison; and how this experience affected postbellum religious belief and practice.

Religion and war have always been at the center of the human condition, with warfare often leading to heightened religiosity. The Civil War cannot be fully explained without understanding religion's role in the conflict. In God's Presence advances this understanding by offering critical insight into the course and consequences of America's epochal fratricidal war.
  • Acknowledgments
  • Introduction
  • 1. Men of the Cloth
  • 2. Christian Soldiers
  • 3. Worship Practices in Camps
  • 4. Constructing Sacred Space in Camp: Churches, Battles, and Diversity
  • 5. Ministering to the Fighting, Dying, Sick, and Wounded
  • 6. Clerical Care in General Hospitals and Prisons
  • Conclusion
  • Notes
  • Bibliography
  • Index

    Benjamin L. Miller

    Benjamin L. Miller is an adjunct instructor of history at Howard Community College in Columbia, Maryland. His work has appeared in the New York Times’s Disunion: The Civil War blog, The World of the Civil War: A Daily Life Encyclopedia, and American Civil War, a part of the Gale Library of Daily Life series.