Degree
Doctor of Philosophy (PhD)
Department
History
Document Type
Dissertation
Abstract
From 1850 to 1865 American Christians used their faith to make sense of the political and militaristic events that unfolded in their lives. The Fugitive Slave act set the tone for the Christian use of faith and theology as a means of interpreting the political moment. Ministers’ responses to the law set a precedent for religious culture in America. They proved that religion could become an analytical frame of reference, and that their faith could put them at odds with those who held opposing views. Black Christians used both their lived racial experiences and their theological imaginations to interpret the political moments surrounding them. They read their lives into the fugitive slaves of the Bible. After the Fugitive Slave Act, a minority of Black Christians who favored fleeing the nation matched their faith in God with their desire to leave the nation. The scriptures gave them a set of biblical characters and people groups to situate their own existence and in the decade leading up to the Civil War, they used the Bible to justify departures into Canada and Liberia. Black Christians supported colonization not just in the name of self-determination or political freedom, but out of a religious conviction that God wanted them to do it. At the commencement of the Civil War, Black and white Christians continued using the lens of religion to make sense of the present. The Civil War era was a marked period of hypermasculine violence. White ministers used masculine biblical allusions to explain the sectional rift. They made the war a battle to protect vulnerable women and children while emphasizing the importance of level-headed men at home and on the battlefield. Black ministers used their religious interpretations of the war to stifle frustrations over their lack of access to the masculine arena of war. Even though they failed to enter the war as men, they still wielded patriarchal authority over Black women, children, and non-fighting men by establishing gendered behavioral expectations within the community. White ministers also set rigid behavioral expectations for women, children, and non-fighting men. In 1863, the war took a turn towards emancipation and Black and white Christians used their faith to interpret this political moment as well. Emancipation became a millennial moment ushering in Christ’s reign on Earth. Northern Christians supported emancipation not just because of human rights interests or legal arguments. They supported it because they believed God wanted them to do so. By the final year of the war Black Christians again used their religious understandings of the war to justify and sanctify war violence. They used the Bible and images of God’s vengeance to legitimize their own willingness to die and kill for the Union. The major legislative and political moments from 1850 to 1865 reveal a prominent pattern among Christians to use their faith during moments of political and social uncertainty.
Date
8-16-2025
Recommended Citation
Harris, Shakeel A., "Tests of Faith: Race, Religion & Gender During the Civil War Era" (2025). LSU Doctoral Dissertations. 6899.
https://repository.lsu.edu/gradschool_dissertations/6899
Committee Chair
Sheehan-Dean, Aaron
Included in
History of Religion Commons, Military History Commons, Religious Thought, Theology and Philosophy of Religion Commons, United States History Commons