Lincoln is the single most compelling figure in our history, but also one of the most enigmatic. Was he the Great Emancipator, a man of deep convictions who ended slavery in the United States, or simply a reluctant politician compelled by the force of events to free the slaves? In Father Abraham, Richard Striner offers a fresh portrait of Lincoln, one that helps us make sense of his many contradictions. Striner shows first that, if you examine the speeches that Lincoln made in the 1850s, you will have no doubt of his passion to end slavery. These speeches illuminate the anger, vehemence, and sheer brilliance of candidate Lincoln, who worked up crowds with charismatic fervor as he gathered a national following. But if he felt so passionately about abolition, why did he wait so long to release the Emancipation Proclamation? As Striner points out, politics is the art of the possible, and Lincoln was a consummate politician, a shrewd manipulator who cloaked his visionary ethics in the more pragmatic garb of the coalition-builder. He was at bottom a Machiavellian prince for a democratic age. When secession began, Lincoln used the battle cry of saving the Union to build a power base, one that would eventually break the slave-holding states forever. Striner argues that Lincoln was a rare man indeed: a fervent idealist and a crafty politician with a remarkable gift for strategy. It was the harmonious blend of these two qualities, Striner concludes, that made Lincoln's role in ending slavery so fundamental.
This volume delineates the link between Judaism and Christanity, between Old and the New Testaments, and calls Christians to reexamine their Hebrew roots so as to effect a more authentically biblical lifestyle.
"More than simply a Festschrift, this book encompasses a uniquely broad range of traditions having to do with Abraham.
"Students, colleagues, and friends have assembled an outstanding collection of studies in honor of long-serving and widely respected Marvin Wilson. Perspectives on Our Father Abraham, a title that alludes to...
Lincoln's father had beaten him as a young man , and he never got over the experience . He was not about to inflict any physical punishment on his own sons , ever . Mary was less successful than Abraham in controlling her temper ...
This book discusses the adult development of the Biblical Patriarch, Abraham, as a 'Spiritual Revolutionary' (based on Genesis 11-25). It begins with the image of the 'akeda, ' the binding...
In fact Emma describes a nurse whom she calls Miss Mary Safford and who sounds remarkably like Anna Etherage. [Referencer Edmonds, op. cit., p. 360.] THE “GOOD OLD SURGEON” who gave Emma her mythical medical discharge may have been a ...
A Biblically based fictional account on the history and life of Abraham and his family.
... father's blessing ; he was able to forgive his brother and embrace him warmly after many decades apart ; his legacy was preserved in the story . Esau and Jacob's sibling relationship demonstrates the convoluted ways in which we all ...
Exalted Father is the story of the life of a man treasured and honored as the father of the worlds three greatest religions, Judaism, Christianity, and Islam.
Not a fragment, not quite a finished work, Father Abraham is the brilliant beginning of a novel which William Faulkner tried repeatedly to write, for a period of almost a decade and a half, during the earlier part of his career—the novel ...