Books

My Top 5 Books on the Civil War

By Allen C. Guelzo, author of Abraham Lincoln: Redeemer President and Lincoln’s Emancipation Proclamation.


Conscience clause omits Catholic hospitals

A proposed conscience exemption to federal health-care rules may require Catholic hospitals to include contraception in health-care plans for employees. The bill requires full coverage of women's contraception, including Plan B and ella (both opposed by pro-life groups); the exemption applies to nonprofit religious employers that exist to instill religious values and employ and serve people of the same religion. Catholic hospitals are nonprofit but meet none of the other requirements.

Hundreds of churches lose approval

HUNGARY A law that takes effect January 1 recognizes 14 faith groups and requires almost 350 others to re-register for state approval in order to receive tax breaks and to use the title "church." The Church of God, Methodists, Pentecostals, and Seventh-Day Adventists are among the excluded. In order to re-register, faith groups must prove they have 1,000 followers and have existed for more than 20 years; then parliament must approve them by a two-thirds majority. The dominant Hungarian Reformed Church welcomed the restrictions on new groups.

School can force Christian groups open

The Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals has ruled that San Diego State University can refuse to recognize student religious groups that limit membership to fellow believers. However, the court said the school may have unfairly singled out a Christian fraternity and sorority while allowing other groups to use race or religion as membership criteria. The policy is more common than a broader one at Hastings School of Law, where the Christian Legal Society (CLS) lost a high-profile Supreme Court appeal last year. In a related case, the CLS dropped a lawsuit against the University of Montana School of Law after reaching a settlement that sets neutral criteria for funding groups.

UN clamps down on blasphemy laws

The United Nations Human Rights Committee updated its freedom of expression definitions for the first time in nearly three decades. Comment No. 34 of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights says that member countries cannot legislate speech in favor of or against specific religious groups (as do blasphemy laws). Secretary of State Hillary Clinton also called for UN member states to implement a spring Human Rights Council decision emphasizing freedom of religion over religious defamation laws.

Future of Catholic foster care uncertain

The State of Illinois can decline to renew foster-care contracts with Catholic Charities, a Sangamon County circuit court ruled. The future of Catholic foster-care services was under review after Illinois legalized civil unions in June. The Illinois Department of Children and Family Services refused to renew funding contracts with Catholic dioceses for the 2012 fiscal year because they will not place children with gay couples. Catholic Charities currently refers such couples to other organizations. More than 2,000 Illinois foster children will be transferred out of Catholic Charities' care.

Religion law clamps down on freedom

ARMENIA Proposed revisions to religious laws would prohibit preaching to children under the age of 14 and would ban "soul-hunting," defined as "improper proselytism." Pastors and democracy advocates in Armenia criticized the new draft as repressive. Meanwhile, churches in Armenia and neighboring Georgia are debating which country owns churches and monasteries near the border.

Court: Discrimination suit can continue

The Billy Graham Evangelistic Association (BGEA) cannot claim a ministerial exception to deflect a lawsuit, a North Carolina federal court ruled. Kimberly McCallum was formerly the only African American in the BGEA executive office. She sued the BGEA, claiming she was the only employee laid off in a downsizing shortly after she complained that black congregations were not asked to participate in a summer program. The court ruled McCallum's job description was administrative, not ministerial, so the BGEA cannot claim a ministerial exception to discriminate in hiring people who perform religious functions.

Church construction bill raises concerns

EGYPT A proposed law is designed to simplify the building process for churches and mosques. But both Coptic and Muslim leaders say its restrictions are impractical. The law would allow only one worship building per square kilometer, but Muslim leaders say many villages need more than that. Catholic leaders said a requirement that buildings be at least 1,000 square meters is similarly impractical. The Cairo Institute for Human Rights Studies asked the cabinet to withdraw the bill because it covers only government-recognized religious groups. Copts have faced tight regulations and great difficulty building new churches, while Muslims face little difficulty building new mosques.

Restructuring and layoffs at Prison Fellowship

Prison Fellowship laid off 72 employees, named new top leadership, and cut funding to a partner program in three states. The inmate ministry named Michigan pastor Jim Liske ceo and former Atlanta pastor Garland Hunt president. Prison Fellowship also announced it would close the InnerChange Freedom Initiative, a partner program that trains inmates for reentry, in Missouri, Kansas, and Arkansas; the program will continue in Texas and Minnesota. Staff in Missouri and Arkansas hope to establish InnerChange as an independent nonprofit rather than shutting down.

California regulates abortion speech

In a pro-life victory, the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals declared unconstitutional California rules that allow abortion-clinic employees to escort clients inside but prevent pro-life protesters from approaching. Policies that set an eight-foot bubble of space around women entering clinics must be enforced without regard to the message being presented, judges ruled.

First Christian elected to parliament

TURKEY Citizens have elected the first Syriac Christian ever to serve in the Turkish parliament. Less than 1 percent of Turkish citizens are Christians. Erol Dora is an independent backed by the pro-Kurdish Peace and Democracy Party. Dora promised he would become the voice of the Syriac community. Only a few Christians have served in Turkey's other legislative seats over the past century.

Americans expelled for proselytizing

UZBEKISTAN The government expelled eight U.S. nationals for allegedly attempting to convert locals to Christianity. The Americans were in the Central Asian nation as English-language teachers and "carried out unlawful missionary activity to attract Uzbek students," according to a report from a state government website. The 90-percent Muslim country bans missionary work and has deported eight other people this year on missionary charges.

Islamic banking system draws controversy

NIGERIA A law legalizing an interest-free Shari'ah banking system has roiled the religiously divided nation. Christian groups have vehemently opposed the law as promoting Islam over other religions. The Central Bank of Nigeria denied the charge, claiming that any group or individual may apply for a license to practice non-interest banking. Media reports indicate a Christian group plans to test the law by creating its own banking system and submitting it to the central bank for approval.

Jesus statues create uproar

CROATIA, PERU Planned statues of Jesus are creating controversy in Europe and South America. In heavily Catholic Croatia, Split mayor Zeljko Kerum announced plans to erect a 129-foot-tall, privately funded statue that would be the tallest Christ sculpture in the world. Critics said the statue was a popularity ploy to gain votes. Meanwhile, departing Peruvian president Alan García ordered the construction of a 120-foot-tall Jesus statue in Lima. Critics said the money should have gone toward social needs.

Copyright © 2011 Christianity Today. Click for reprint information.




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The American Civil War Peter J. Parish

The finest single-volume survey of the Civil War, complete with attention to civilian as well as military conflicts in American society. Gorgeously well written by, surprisingly, a British historian.

* * *

The Civil War as a Theological Crisis Mark A. Noll

For all its brevity (216 pages), the best account and interpretation of how Christian ideas shaped, and were shaped by, the Civil War. Not, thankfully, a religious history or a church history, but a theological history.

* * *

Half a century ago, Archbishop Fulton Sheen’s weekly television series Life Is Worth Living (and later The Fulton Sheen Program) was watched by millions of Americans of all stripes. Sheen was “America’s Priest,” and since then there has been no comparable figure in American culture—and there may never be. That said, Father Robert Barron, a priest of the Chicago archdiocese and the Francis Cardinal George Professor of Faith and Culture at Mundelein Seminary, is making inroads into mainstream media in a way not seen since Sheen. On Sunday, October 3, Chicago-based superstation WGN America launched a weekly half-hour television series, Word on Fire with Father Robert Barron—the first regular commercial television show hosted by a priest since Sheen. Then there’s Catholicism, an ambitious ten-episode series, episodes of which are now airing on PBS affiliate in over 85 markets across the country.. Inspired by Kenneth Clark’s groundbreaking 1969 BBC series Civilisation, which ushered in a generation of globe-hopping documentaries, Fr. Barron and his crew employ a worldwide backdrop that includes the Holy Land, Europe, Africa, India, the Philippines—at least 50 locations in 15 countries. Unabashedly a work of advocacy, even evangelization, Catholicism offers a confident, upbeat overview of the scope of 2000 years of Catholic history, belief, thought and practice. Much of this is the common heritage of all Christians, and Fr. Barron’s approach is catholic as well as Catholic, name-checking C. S. Lewis and N. T. Wright alongside Thomas Aquinas and Augustine. Evangelicals will feel very much at home for the first few episodes as Fr. Barron expounds upon the disorienting, challenging uniqueness of Jesus, the revolutionary power of his teachings, and the fathomless mystery of God. Other episodes, particularly those dealing with the Virgin Mary and the Eucharist, will challenge non-Catholic sensibilities, but Fr. Barron’s emphasis on Scripture and reason establishes a broad common ground, and open-minded Evangelicals will appreciate his presentation even when they disagree. Fr. Barron makes an engaging, appealing spokesman for Christianity and Catholicism, and his method is consistently positive and nonpolemical. He discusses topics like Aquinas’s ways of proving God and Catholic Marian spirituality without going out of his way to oppose challenges like “God is a delusion” or “Catholics worship Mary.” The settings are more than window dressing; Fr. Barron goes to Auschwitz to discuss the problem of evil, and magnificent locations including Hagia Sophia, the Church of the Holy Sepulchre and the tomb of Mother Teresa help to bring the Faith alive to the senses and the imagination. Click here and/or check local PBS listings for Catholicism. The series is also available as a five-disc DVD set at catholicismseries.com. Here is the trailer for Catholicism:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=m8gUO75KhGc?version=3
Battle Tactics of the Civil War Paddy Griffith

Another British historian, this time a military one, whose utterly fresh-faced look at the tactics, weapons, and combat experience of the Civil War amaze on every page. Your favorite myths about rifled muskets and total war deflate like a shot balloon.

* * *

On the Threshold of Freedom: Masters and Slaves in Civil War Georgia Clarence l. Mohr

Despite the increased outflow of Civil War “social history” over the last 20 years, Mohr’s book remains the model for interpreting the home-front experiences of Civil War Southerners, black and white.

* * *

Half a century ago, Archbishop Fulton Sheen’s weekly television series Life Is Worth Living (and later The Fulton Sheen Program) was watched by millions of Americans of all stripes. Sheen was “America’s Priest,” and since then there has been no comparable figure in American culture—and there may never be. That said, Father Robert Barron, a priest of the Chicago archdiocese and the Francis Cardinal George Professor of Faith and Culture at Mundelein Seminary, is making inroads into mainstream media in a way not seen since Sheen. On Sunday, October 3, Chicago-based superstation WGN America launched a weekly half-hour television series, Word on Fire with Father Robert Barron—the first regular commercial television show hosted by a priest since Sheen. Then there’s Catholicism, an ambitious ten-episode series, episodes of which are now airing on PBS affiliate in over 85 markets across the country.. Inspired by Kenneth Clark’s groundbreaking 1969 BBC series Civilisation, which ushered in a generation of globe-hopping documentaries, Fr. Barron and his crew employ a worldwide backdrop that includes the Holy Land, Europe, Africa, India, the Philippines—at least 50 locations in 15 countries. Unabashedly a work of advocacy, even evangelization, Catholicism offers a confident, upbeat overview of the scope of 2000 years of Catholic history, belief, thought and practice. Much of this is the common heritage of all Christians, and Fr. Barron’s approach is catholic as well as Catholic, name-checking C. S. Lewis and N. T. Wright alongside Thomas Aquinas and Augustine. Evangelicals will feel very much at home for the first few episodes as Fr. Barron expounds upon the disorienting, challenging uniqueness of Jesus, the revolutionary power of his teachings, and the fathomless mystery of God. Other episodes, particularly those dealing with the Virgin Mary and the Eucharist, will challenge non-Catholic sensibilities, but Fr. Barron’s emphasis on Scripture and reason establishes a broad common ground, and open-minded Evangelicals will appreciate his presentation even when they disagree. Fr. Barron makes an engaging, appealing spokesman for Christianity and Catholicism, and his method is consistently positive and nonpolemical. He discusses topics like Aquinas’s ways of proving God and Catholic Marian spirituality without going out of his way to oppose challenges like “God is a delusion” or “Catholics worship Mary.” The settings are more than window dressing; Fr. Barron goes to Auschwitz to discuss the problem of evil, and magnificent locations including Hagia Sophia, the Church of the Holy Sepulchre and the tomb of Mother Teresa help to bring the Faith alive to the senses and the imagination. Click here and/or check local PBS listings for Catholicism. The series is also available as a five-disc DVD set at catholicismseries.com. Here is the trailer for Catholicism:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=m8gUO75KhGc?version=3
Lee’s Miserables: Life in the Army of Northern Virginia from the Wilderness to Appomattox J. Tracy Power

The most ambitious and innovative history of Civil War soldiers on offer, focusing on the final campaigns of the Army of Northern Virginia.

Copyright © 2007 Christianity Today. Click for reprint information.

Related Elsewhere:

Christianity Today and Books & Culture articles on the Civil War include:

Christian History Corner: Reports of the Revival | The Confederate camp became a school of Christ. (November 1, 2004)

Books & Culture’s Book of the Week: Divinely Decreed? | Re-fighting the Battle of Gettysburg (June 1, 2003)

Christian History Corner: Peace on Earth? | Christmas Carols and the Civil War. (December 1, 2000)

Christian History Corner: General Revelations | Reconsidering Robert E. Lee and Ulysses S. Grant. (October 1, 2000)

“Baptism in Blood” | The Civil War and the creation of an American civil religion. (Books & Culture, July/August 2003)

When Thou Goest Out to Battle | The religious world of Civil War soldiers. (Books & Culture, July/August 2003)

How the War Might Have Ended | A conversation with historian Jay Winik. (Books & Culture, July 1, 2003)

Changing the Script | A discovery that altered the course of the war. (Books & Culture, July 1, 2003)

Still Writing the Civil War | Do we know this country too well? (Books & Culture, July 1, 2003)

Abolition’s Hidden History | How black argument led to white commitment. (Books & Culture, September 1, 1999)

America’s Holy War | The American Civil War was not a war about religion. Its object was not to exterminate a religious infidel, or impose religious uniformity. Yet it was a holy war. (Books & Culture, March 1, 2000)

Also see Christian History & Biography‘s Issue 33: Christianity and the Civil War.

Other articles on books are available on our site.

Also in this issue

The CT archives are a rich treasure of biblical wisdom and insight from our past. Some things we would say differently today, and some stances we've changed. But overall, we're amazed at how relevant so much of this content is. We trust that you'll find it a helpful resource.

Cover Story

What God Has Joined

David Instone-Brewer

News

From Hand Out to Hand Up

Isaac Phiri

Puncturing Atheism

Amazing Newton

News

Taking Revival to the World

Cassandra Zinchini

News

The Good Shepherds

Rob Moll

Why Muslims Follow Jesus

J. Dudley Woodberry, Russell G. Shubin, and G. Marks

Until We Meet Again

Daniel R. Lockwood

A Grounded Faith

Gary M. Burge

Gutsy Guilt

News

Tethered to the Center

Collin Hansen

Community of Memory

Blessed Are the Merciful

Compiled by Richard A. Kauffman

Interview with a Pharisee—and a Christian

When Red Is Blue

Excerpt

Runner-up Wife

Ginger Kolbaba

Redeeming the Remarried

Ron L. Deal

News

The Fatherless Child

A Christianity Today Editorial

News

Amusing Ourselves on Sunday

A Christianity Today Editorial

When the Lights Go Out

Bookmarks

John Wilson

A Fishy Facebook Friend

The Dread Cancer of Stinginess

John Rowell

News

Quotation Marks

Review

Lovers in a Dangerous Time

Jeffrey Overstreet

News

Go Figure

News

The Death of Blogs

News

Passages

Q&A: Peter Wehner

Interview by Collin Hansen

News

News Briefs: October 10, 2007

Broken Bonds

Sarah Eekhoff Zylstra

News

Campus Capitalism

Kristen Scharold

News

Milking Martyrdom

News

The Best Research Yet

Tim Stafford

News

An Older, Wiser Ex-Gay Movement

Tim Stafford

News

Moving to 'Acceptance'

Lisa Parro

News

Anglicans Turn Inside Out

Sheryl Henderson Blunt

News

Uniform Disagreement

Ken Walker

News

Choosing a Side

Jocelyn Green

View issue

Our Latest

How He Leaves

After his final tour, independent musician John Mark McMillan is backing out of the algorithm rat race but still chasing transcendence.

Review

Review: ‘House of David’ Season 2

Peter T. Chattaway

The swordfights and staring lovers start to feel like padding. Then, all at once, the show speeds up.‌

Being Human

Abby Thompson on Overcoming Anxiety in the Big City

A young professional’s journey to self-discovery

The Russell Moore Show

Listener Question: Are Late Prayers Still Worth Praying?

 Russell takes a listener’s question about whether God can still use prayers, and the conversation broadens to mind-breaking theology about God’s transcendence of time itself.

Analysis

Republicans and Democrats Clash on Epstein File Release

The Bulletin with Nicole Martin

The newest documents remind Christians to support sexual abuse victims.

Evangelicals Confront a Revolutionary Age

A Catholic on the campaign trail and the “possibly catastrophic character of what is happening under our eyes” caused deep concern in 1960.

News

Hindu Nationalists Attack Missionaries in Northern India

One victim describes the mob descending on their bus, a rare occurrence in Muslim-majority Jammu and Kashmir.

News

Armenia Holds Inaugural Prayer Breakfast Amid Church Arrests

Some see the crackdown as persecution, others challenge the national church’s ties to Russia.

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