Tabernacles in the Wilderness

The US Christian Commission on the Civil War Battlefront

Rachel Williams author

Format:Paperback

Publisher:Kent State University Press

Published:31st Mar '24

£37.95

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Tabernacles in the Wilderness cover

Examining how a civilian organization used the Civil War to advance their religious mission

Tabernacles in the Wilderness discusses the work of the United States Christian Commission (USCC), a civilian relief agency established by northern evangelical Protestants to minister to Union troops during the American Civil War. USCC workers saw in the Civil War not only a wrathful judgment from God for the sins of the nation but an unparalleled opportunity to save the souls of US citizens and perfect the nation. Thus, the workers set about proselytizing and distributing material aid to Union soldiers with undaunted and righteous zeal.

Whether handing out religious literature, leading prayer meetings, preaching sermons, mending uniforms, drawing up tailored diets for sick men, or bearing witness to deathbed scenes, USCC workers improvised and enacted a holistic lived theology that emphasized the link between the body and soul.

Making extensive use of previously neglected archival material—most notably the reports, diaries, and correspondence of the volunteer delegates who performed this ministry on the battlefront—Rachel Williams explores the proselytizing methods employed by the USCC, the problems encountered in their application, and the ideological and theological underpinnings of their work. Tabernacles in the Wilderness offers fascinating new insights into the role of civilians within army camps, the bureaucratization and professionalization of philanthropy during the Civil War and in the United States more broadly, and the emotional landscape and material culture of faith and worship.

"Lucidly written and deeply researched, this book provides the fullest available account of the Christian Commission's role during the Civil War and the intellectual and spiritual world of the men and women who contributed to it. In doing so, Rachel Williams makes a major contribution to our understanding of the role of religion in the American Civil War. She shows that for evangelicals, the spiritual and physical health of soldiers were inseparable and that the blood sacrifice of Christian men would bring about a national spiritual rebirth."—Adam Smith, Oxford University, author of The Stormy Present: Conservatism and the Problem of Slavery in Northern Politics, 1846–1865<

"What Rachel Williams has achieved here is a beautifully written, impressively researched, and much-needed study of a Union religious relief organization too long overshadowed by the people and the politics of the United States Sanitary Commission. Through her moving account of how the USCC sought to save the bodies and secure the souls of Union troops, Williams has done nothing less than brought back to us out of the gore and terror of the Civil War battlefields a moving reflection on the power and ambition of the human spirit." —Susan-Mary Grant, author of The Cambridge Concise History of the United States of America and Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr.: Civil War Soldier, Supreme Court Justice<

ISBN: 9781606354735

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: 168g

202 pages