cmd wA Lincoln's use of the Bible reveals his knowlege of its words, his reverence for its teachings By CLARENCE E. MACARTNEY $1.25 LINCOLN Clarence Edward Macartney The author, an authority on the Lincoln era as well as a theologian and preacher of wide reputation, lets the records speak for them- selves. He finds much to substan- tiate the claims of those who main- tain that Lincoln could never have said the things he said, done the things he did, or passed through the strain and rigors of national crisis without a substantial and deep- seated faith in the Supreme Being. ABINGDON-COKESBURY LINCOLN ROOM UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS LIBRARY MEMORIAL the Class of 1901 founded by HARLAN HOYT HORNER and HENRIETTA CALHOUN HORNER LINCOLN AND THE BIBLE Digitized by the Internet Archive in 2012 with funding from University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign http://www.archive.org/details/lincolnbibleOOmaca LINCOLN by Clarence Edward Macartney Author of Little Mac — The Life of General George B. McClellan, Lincoln and His Generals, Lincoln and His Cabinet, Highways and Byways of the Civil War ABINGDON-COKESBURY PRESS New York • Nashville LINCOLN AND THE BIBLE COPYRIGHT MCMXLIX BY PIERCE & SMITH All rights in this book are reserved. No part of the text may be reproduced in any form without written per- mission of the publishers, except brief quotations used in connection with reviews in magazines or newspapers. SET UP, PRINTED, AND BOUND BY THE PARTHENON PRESS, AT NASHVILLE, TENNESSEE, UNITED STATES OF AMERICA LINCOLN and the Bible t i MJ 2 X It was a hot August day in 1858 at the little Illinois county seat of Ottawa, the first day of the famous Lincoln-Douglas debates in their contest for the senator- ship from Illinois — a contest which was to have a far greater issue than the election of a senator. When Lincoln rose to take his turn and answer Douglas, the "Little Giant," whose first name was Stephen, he took off his linen duster, which all travel- ers wore in that day, and, handing it to one of his backers on the platform, said in a voice which reached far out in the crowd about the stand: "Hold my coat while I stone Stephen!" the book OF the There were few in the thousands listen- ing to Lincoln that day who did not rec- ognize at once the allusion to the first martyr, Stephen, and how, when he was stoned, "the witnesses laid down their 5 PEOPLE LINCOLN AND THE BIBLE clothes at a young man's feet, whose name was Saul." But if Lincoln were to appear on a platform today in a debate with Douglas, and say what he did that day in 1858, his introductory remark about stoning Stephen would not raise the laugh that it did then, when the Bible was the book of the people, in Illinois and every- where else in the United States. Now that can no longer be said. Today people would go away saying one to another: "What did Lincoln mean when he told that man to hold his linen duster while he stoned Stephen?" In 1858 the knowledge of the Bible and the ability to quote it was an effective and popular weapon of the po- litical orator, and no one used that weapon more successfully than Lincoln. Perhaps the most familiar and best- THE fa vorite r ... PHOTOGRAPH liked photograph of Lincoln is that which LINCOLN AND THE BIBLE shows him reading the pages of a large book, with his son Tad standing by his side. The book looks like a Bible. It was not a Bible, however, but one of the old- time photograph albums. Lincoln told his friend Noah Brooks that he was concerned lest people would think he was pretending to read the Bible to Tad, and that thus the picture would go out as a false pretense. But Lincoln need not have been concerned on that score, for most of the people knew that he was, at that time at least, a con- stant reader of the Bible, and that he quoted frequently from its pages in his speeches, letters, and conversation. references to the Going through his speeches, state papers, letters, and recorded conversa- tions, we discover that there are seventy- seven quotations from, or references to, the Bible. The majority of these are in LINCOLN AND THE BIBLE his speeches, with his conversation a close second. Most of the citations are from the four Gospels and the words of Jesus. Genesis comes second, while the Psalms and the book of Exodus are tied for third place. He quotes from twenty-two of the sixty- six books of the Bible, and sixteen of the twenty-two are books of the Old Testa- ment. There is no doubt about the familiarity " ABE READ THE - i B,BLE S0ME " of Lincoln with the Scriptures, or the readiness with which he quoted from them ; but there is a difference of opinion as to how he gained this remarkable knowledge of the Bible. His second cousin Dennis Hanks, illegitimate son of Nancy Hanks, aunt of Nancy Hanks, Lincoln's mother, who was brought up with Lincoln in Indi- ana, held that "Lincoln didnt read the Bible half as much as [is] said," and that LINCOLN AND THE BIBLE although "he did read it, I though [t] he never believed it and think so still." * Sarah Bush Lincoln, Lincoln's most worthy step- mother, confirms Dennis Hanks' testi- mony: "Abe read the Bible some, though not as much as said." On the other hand we have the testimony of another Indiana companion of Lincoln, Nathaniel Grigsby, who, with Lincoln and the other boys, used to sing "carnal love songs" together. He said that Lincoln "was a great talker on the Scriptures and read it a great deal." * A cabin library Sarah Bush Johnston married Lincoln's father, Thomas Lincoln, in 1819, and brought to the lonely and neglected Indi- ana cabin at Gentryville a few books, but very worth-while ones: Robmson Crusoe, Pilgrim's Progress, Sinbad the Sailor, and 1 Beveridge, Abraham Lincoln, I, 72. 10 LINCOLN AND THE BIBLE Aesop's Fables. Dennis Hanks tells us that "Thomas Lincoln brought the Bible in 1818, or 1819." It is possible, but not likely, that this was the first Bible that Lincoln saw in his first home. His father was an officer in the Pigeon Creek Baptist Church, and for that reason it would seem unlikely that there would be no Bible in his home. Sarah Bush Lincoln, the step- mother who entered Lincoln's life when he was ten years old, could neither read nor write, but like other wilderness women she undoubtedly knew many of the passages of the Scriptures by heart and repeated them to her stepchildren. The brief biographical sketch in Honest THE TEN COMMANDMENTS Abe s Jokes relates how his own mother drilled him in the Ten Commandments, especially her favorite commandments — the third, "Thou shalt not take the name of LINCOLN AND THE BIBLE 11 the Lord thy God in vain"; the fourth, "Remember the sabbath day, to keep it holy"; and fifth, "Honor thy father and thy mother" ; and the ninth, "Thou shalt not bear false witness against thy neigh- bor." the voice of This would agree with what Lincoln NANCY HANKS ° said one day to his friend Mrs. Rankin, at a Sunday-school Convention held at Petersburg, not far from New Salem, when the question was being discussed as to what age children were morally responsible and prepared to be taught the Bible. Lin- coln told Mrs. Rankin that before he was able to read he had memorized verses of the Bible by hearing his mother repeat them as she went about her daily work in the Indiana cabin, and that when he read them as a man he seemed to hear the voice 12 LINCOLN AND THE BIBLE of Nancy Hanks speaking them to him as of old. 2 There was another source of biblical THE w,LDERNE ss PREACHERS knowledge upon which undoubtedly Lin- coln drew as a boy, and that was the preaching to which he listened at the Pi- geon Creek Hardshell Baptist Church. The wilderness preachers were sometimes men of little education, but they did know the Bible, and they preached about the doc- trines and characters of the Bible, and ex- horted sinners and comforted saints in the noble language of the King James Bible. Lincoln had a remarkable memory, and frequently he would gather the boys about him and mimic the preacher. In doing so he had to employ the language of the Scrip- tures and talk about the personalities of 2 Sandburg, Abraham Lincoln — The Prairie Years, I, 416. LINCOLN AND THE BIBLE 13 the Bible, for the preachers of that day, unlike so many of our day who are en- grossed with international and social themes, preached about God, the soul, sin, redemption, regeneration, the bliss of heaven, and the punishments of hell. Lin- coln never yielded to any of the revivals that swept the churches when he was a boy and a young man at Gentryville, or in his days at New Salem and Springfield, but he owed a debt of gratitude to those wilderness preachers who sank the lan- guage of the Old Testament and the New Testament into his mind and soul. quoting the When Lincoln was practicing law at SCRIPTURES o-^iii i i • i Springfield, he drove out one day with a printer, Gilbert J. Greene, to a farmhouse to draw up a last will and testament for a woman who was dying. When the docu- ment had been signed and witnessed, the 14 LINCOLN AND THE BIBLE woman said : "Mr. Lincoln, won't you read a few verses out of the Bible for me?" One of the family brought in a Bible, but instead of reading from it, Lincoln quoted from memory the twenty-third psalm, and the beautiful sentences of our Saviour's farewell address to his disciples on the same night on which he was betrayed, be- ginning : "Let not your heart be troubled : ye believe in God, believe also in me. In my Father's house are many mansions: if A it were not so, I would have told you. I go to prepare a place for you." 8 By that time in his life, at least, Lincoln was quite familiar with the Scriptures and could quote from memory many of the well- known passages. At Washington he was, according to H,s 0WN B,BLE Ibid. LINCOLN AND THE BIBLE 15 John G. Nicolay, one of his secretaries, "a constant reader of the Bible and had great faith in it." Among the books that lay on his desk in his office at the White House were the United States Statutes, Shakespeare's plays, and the Bible. Lincoln had long been in possession of an Oxford Bible, for on a photograph of himself which he sent in 1861 to the mother of his old friend Joshua Speed, he inscribed these words: "For Mrs. Lucy G. Speed, from whose pious hand I accepted the pres- ent of an Oxford Bible twenty years ago. J5 itTecJ JJly READ ThIs Was the same Bible t0 which he referred in a letter to Miss Mary Speed, September 27, 1841, when he was passing through the deep waters after he had failed to appear on the day set for his marriage to Mary Todd. "Tell your mother," he wrote, "that I have not got her present 16 LINCOLN AND THE BIBLE [an Oxford Bible] with me, but I intend to read it regularly when I return home. I doubt not that it is really, as she says, the best cure for the blues, could one but take it according to the truth." Lincoln's familiarity with the Bible is WAS HE A J BELIEVER? witnessed to by his conversation, letters, and speeches. But what about his faith in the Bible and in the Christ to whom the Scriptures bear witness? Here we enter a territory of dispute and controversy. Modernists, freethinkers, rationalists, and even infidels, have claimed Lincoln as one of their own; likewise orthodox and evan- gelical Christians. It is well to remember, when this subject is being discussed, that men's moods vary, and we must be guided by the general tone of a man's life and thought and speech. The published sayings of Napoleon will sometimes make him out LINCOLN AND THE BIBLE 17 to be a devout believer in Christ, and some of the noblest tributes to Christ fell from the lips of the Corsican conqueror; but also from the same lips expressions of stark materialism and infidelity; for ex- ample, when he said, speaking of the soul and immortality : "Knock me on the head. Then where is my soul?" So among the say- ings of Lincoln there are those which have the accent of skepticism, if not out-and-out unbelief, and others which seem to indicate that he was "not far from the Kingdom." "that's my a s an illustration of the religious creed RELIGION" of Lincoln, his law partner Herndon heard him once remark that his religion was like that of an old man, Glenn, whom he had heard speak at a church meeting in Indi- ana, who said: "When I do good I feel good ; when I do bad I feel bad : and that's my religion." 18 LINCOLN AND THE BIBLE According to the account of Herndon, BURN,NC AN to * INDISCRETION when Lincoln was living at New Salem he got hold of Volney's Ruins and Thomas Paine's Age of Reason, and read them both with great interest. There was a free- thinking group at New Salem, and this probably encouraged him to try his own hand at writing an antiscriptural and anti-Christian document. In this manu- script, which he intended to have published, he endeavored to show that the Bible was not a divine revelation and that Jesus was not the Son of God. He read from the man- uscript one day to a group of hearers at the store w r here he was employed. Among the listeners was his employer, Samuel Hill, who was himself something of an agnostic and freethinker, but who, seeing the risk to Lincoln's political future if he were asso- ciated with such ideas, took the manuscript LINCOLN AND THE BIBLE 19 out of his hand and threw it into the stove. "The book went up in flames and Lincoln's political future was secure." 4 source OF this Herndon derived this information from STORY an article in the Manard Axis of February 15, 1862, sent to him by the editor, John Hill, in June, 1865. John Hill was a po- litical enemy of Lincoln, and a son of Samuel Hill, Lincoln's employer at Salem. John Hill himself, born in 1834, could have had no personal recollection of the book-burning incident, for, according to his story, Lincoln's book was burned soon after he had been sold out by a sheriff's sale in November, 1834. The story in the Manard Axis says that Lincoln himself re- pented of his infidel work and consigned it to the flames. The story as told by Hern- * Herndon, Life of Lincoln, p. 355, 20 LINCOLN AND THE BIBLE don makes Samuel Hill the one who threw the manuscript into the flames. In 1864 Lincoln defeated Peter Cart- accusations of PETER CARTWRICHT wright, the famous Methodist preacher and circuit rider, for Congress. In this cam- paign there were rumors that Lincoln was an infidel. On August 11, some days after the election, Lincoln wrote to Allen N. Ford, editor of the Illinois Gazette, of Lacon, about an article which had ap- peared in that paper, saying : Shortly before starting on my tour through yours and other northern counties of the dis- trict, I was informed by letter from Jack- sonville that Mr. Cartwright was whispering the charge of infidelity against me in that quarter. I at once wrote a contradiction of it and sent it to my friends there with the request that they should publish it or not as in their discretion they might think proper, LINCOLN AND THE BIBLE 21 having in view the extent of the circulation of the charge, as also the extent of the cre- dence it might be receiving. They did not publish it. After my return from your part of the District, I was informed that he had been putting the same charge in circulation against me in some of the neighborhoods in our own, and one or two of the adjoining counties. . . . After some reflection I published the little handbill, herewith enclosed, and sent it to the neighborhoods above referred to. In this handbill Lincoln said : To the Voters of the Seventh Congressional District: Fellow Citizens: reply TO PETER a charge having got into circulation in some of the neighborhoods of this district in substance that I am an open scoffer at Chris- tianity, I have by the advice of some friends concluded to notice the subject in this form. 22 LINCOLN AND THE BIBLE That I am not a member of any Christian church is true; but I have never denied the truth of the Scripture; and I have never spoken with intentional disrespect of religion in general, or of any denomination of Chris- tians in particular. It is true that in early life I was inclined to believe in what I un- derstand is called the "Doctrine of Neces- sity," — that is, that the human mind is im- pelled to action or held in rest by some power over which the mind itself has no con- trol; and I have sometimes (with one, two, or three, but never publicly) tried to main- tain this opinion in argument. The habit of arguing thus, however, I have entirely left off for more than five years; and I add here I have always understood this same opinion to be held by several of the Christian denomina- tions. The foregoing is the whole truth, briefly stated in relation to myself on this subject. I do not think I could myself be brought THE SCOFFER to support a man for office whom I knew to be an open enemy of, and scoffer at, religion. LINCOLN AND THE BIBLE 23 Leaving the higher matter of eternal conse- quences between him and his Maker, I still do not think any man has the right thus to insult the feelings and injure the morals of the community in which he may live. If then I was guilty of such conduct, I should blame no man who would condemn me for it; but I do blame those, whoever they may be, who falsely put such a charge in circulation against me. A. Lincoln 5 the doctrine of J n this handbill Lincoln declares, what all students of his life well know, that he was not a member of any Christian church. But he also declares that he believes in the truth of the Scriptures, and that he him- self would not vote for any man who was a scoffer at religion. He states also that he 5 Louis A. Warren, Lincoln Lore, No. 677, March 30, 1942. 24 LINCOLN AND THE BIBLE had been inclined to believe in the "Doc- trine of Necessity," and that he had fre- quently argued in favor of it, but not in recent years. He distinguishes between the doctrine of necessity and the doctrine of fatalism by saying that, as he understands it, this same opinion was held by several of the Christian denominations. Lincoln no doubt refers to the Presbyterians, to the Calvinistic Baptists, and to other branches of the Protestant church which held to the doctrine of Predestination. The first preaching to which Lincoln as a boy lis- tened in the Pigeon Creek Hard Shell Bap- tist Church at Gentryville, Indiana, was undoubtedly Calvinistic, and laid much stress on the doctrine of Predestination. Lincoln frequently expressed his faith in belief in divine , , « , ,. . SOVEREIGNTY the doctrine of the divine sovereignty, LINCOLN AND THE BIBLE 25 and that God has a great and invincible plan which he is working out through the ages. He gave notable expression to that faith in his second inaugural address, when he said, "The Almighty has his own pur- poses." In a letter to Thurlow Weed, who had written to Lincoln praising him for the address, Lincoln wrote a comment on that great utterance: COD COVERNINC I expect the latter to wear as well as, per- THE WORLD haps better than, any thing I have produced; but I believe it is not immediately popular. Men are not flattered by being shown that there has been a difference of purpose be- tween the Almighty and them. To deny it, however, in this case, is to deny that there is a God governing the world. 6 • Abraham Lincoln, Complete Works, ed. Nico- lay and Hay, II, 661. 26 LINCOLN AND THE BIBLE Lincoln was firmly convinced that he was an agent of divine Providence. In a conversation with L. E. Chittenden, reg- ister of the treasury, he said : That the Almighty does make use of hu- man agencies, and directly intervenes in hu- man affairs, is one of the plainest statements of the Bible. I have had so many evidences of his direction, so many instances when I have been controlled by some other power than my own will, that I cannot doubt that this power comes from above. I frequently see my way clear to a decision when I am conscious that I have no sufficient facts upon which to found it. But I cannot recall one instance in which I have followed my own judgment founded upon such a decision, where the results were unsatisfactory; where- as, in almost every instance where I have yielded to the views of others, I have had occasion to regret it. I am satisfied that when AGENT OF PROVIDENCE LINCOLN AND THE BIBLE 27 the Almighty wants me to do or not to do a particular thing, he finds a way of letting me know it. I am confident that it is his de- sign to restore the Union. He will do it in his own good time. We should obey and not oppose his will. 7 COD in history 0ne of Lincoln's most beautiful letters is the one he wrote to the Quaker, Eliza P. Gurney, in which he thanked her for her prayers in his behalf. In this letter he said : I am much indebted to the good Christian people of the country for their constant prayers and consolation, and to no one of them more than to yourself. The purposes of the Almighty are perfect and must prevail, though we erring mortals may fail to ac- curately perceive them in advance. We hoped for a happy termination of this terrible war 7 Chittenden, Recollections of President Lincoln and His Administration, p. 448. 28 LINCOLN AND THE BIBLE long before this. But God knows best and has ruled otherwise. We shall acknowledge his wisdom and our own error therein. Mean- while, we must work earnestly in the best light he gives us, trusting that so working still conduces to the great ends he ordains. Surely he intends some great good to follow this mighty convulsion, which no mortal could make, and no mortal could stay. 8 Here again Lincoln gives expression to his faith in the doctrine of the divine gov- ernment and plan for the world. This same note Lincoln strikes in a let- comfort, nc a FRIEND ter written to his closest friend, Joshua F. Speed, comforting him at the time of his anxiety about the health of his wife Fanny : I hope and believe that your present anx- iety and distress about her health and her 8 Works, ed. Nicolay and Hay, II, 573. LINCOLN AND THE BIBLE 29 life must and will forever banish those hor- rid doubts which I know you sometimes felt as to the truth of your affection for her. If they can once and forever be removed (and I almost feel a presentiment that the Almighty has sent your present affliction expressly for that object), surely nothing can come in their stead to fill their immeasurable measure of misery. . . . Should she, as you fear, be des- tined to an early grave, it is indeed a great consolation to know that she is so well pre- pared to meet it. Her religion, which you once disliked so much, I will venture you now prize most highly. 9 These citations are sufficient to show that Lincoln held to the doctrine of neces- sity, not in the fatalistic sense, but in the Christian sense of divine providence. christian or His inclination to skepticism followed ATHEIST? r Lincoln when he went to Springfield and 9 Ibid., I, 55. 30 LINCOLN AND THE BIBLE began to build up his career as a lawyer and politician. Lincoln's friend and polit- ical manager James H. Matheny was em- ployed in the county clerk's office, which was in the same building as the office of Stuart and Lincoln. Matheny says : Lincoln would come into the clerk's office, "ENTHUSIASTIC IN , T , .. HIS INFIDELITY" where 1 and some young men . . . were writ- ing or staying, and would bring the Bible with him ; would read a chapter ; argue against it. Lincoln then had a smattering of geology, if I recollect it. Lincoln often, if not wholly, was an atheist; at least bordered on it. Lin- coln was enthusiastic in his infidelity. As he grew older, he grew more discreet, didn't talk much before strangers about his religion ; but to friends, close and bosom ones, he was always open and avowed, fair and honest ; but to strangers, he held them off from policy. 10 10 Lamon, Life of Lincoln, p. 488. LINCOLN AND THE BIBLE 31 an avowed and Lincoln's first law partner, John T. >PEN INFIDEL*' r Stuart, wrote Herndon that he was an avowed and open infidel, and some- times bordered on atheism; . . .went further against Christian beliefs and doctrines and principles than any man I ever heard; he shocked me. . . . Lincoln always denied that Jesus was the Christ of God — denied that Jesus was the son of God as understood and maintained by the Christian Church. 11 "he had no David Davis, one of the group of Illinois FAITH" , . & r politicians who secured the nomination for Lincoln at the Chicago convention in 1860, said of him : "He had no faith in the Chris- tian sense of the term . . . had faith in law, principles, causes and effects." In addition to these statements we have the word of Mary Todd, Lincoln's wife: 11 Herndon, op. cit., p. 356. 32 LINCOLN AND THE BIBLE Mr. Lincoln had no faith and no hope in the usual acceptation of those words. He never joined a church; but still, as I believe, he was a religious man by nature. He first seemed to talk about the subject when our boy Willie died, and then more than ever about the time he went to Gettysburg. But it was a kind of poetry in his nature, and he was never a technical Christian. 12 The pastor of the First Presbyterian H,s W,FES PAST0R Church at Springfield, where Lincoln had a pew, and where his wife worshiped, the Rev. James Smith, afterward appointed by Lincoln consul at Dundee, Scotland, composed a treatise in defense of the Chris- tian revelation, which, he says, drew from Lincoln an acknowledgment that the argu- ment was "unanswerable." But according to Lamon, Lincoln laid the manuscript 12 Ibid., pp. 359-360. LINCOLN AND THE BIBLE 33 down on a table in his office and never again looked at it. 13 belief in the jf Lincoln had a deep vein of skepticism SUPERNATURAL ... in him, which none can deny, he had also a vein of belief in the supernatural. Lamon relates how on one occasion at the White House he began to talk about his dreams. He had noted that there were sixteen chap- ters in the Old Testament and four or five in the New in which dreams were men- tioned. "If we believe the Bible, we must accept the fact that in the old days God and his angels came to men in their sleep and made themselves known in dreams." When Mrs. Lincoln asked him if he be- lieved in dreams, he said he could not say that he did, but that he had one recent- ly which had haunted him ever since. The 18 Lamon, op. cit., p. 499. 34 LINCOLN AND THE BIBLE first time he opened the Bible after dream- ing this dream it was at the twenty-eighth chapter of Genesis, which relates Jacob's dream at Bethel of the ladder, the top of which reached unto heaven, and the angels of God ascending and descending. "I kept on turning the leaves of the old book, and everywhere my eye fell upon passages re- cording matters strangely in keeping with my own thoughts — supernatural visita- tions, dreams, visions, etc." 14 The testimony of men like Herndon, and THE B,BLE " THE BEST GIFT" Lincoln's bodyguard, Lamon, does not tell the whole story about his religious belief. Over against these witnesses must be placed the statement that he made to the commit- tee of colored people of Baltimore who pre- sented him with a costly Bible. Calling the 14 Sandburg, Abraham Lincoln — The War Years, IV, 243-44. LINCOLN AND THE BIBLE 35 Bible "the best gift God has given to man," Lincoln continued: All the good Saviour gave to the world was communicated through this book. But for it we could not know right from wrong. All things most desirable for man's welfare, here and hereafter, are to be found portrayed in it. 15 reassuring his When Lincoln learned that his father, DYING FATHER Thomas Lincoln, was dying, he wrote a let- ter to his stepbrother John D. Johnston. In this letter he said : I sincerely hope father may recover his health ; but at all events tell him to remember to call upon and confide in our great and good and merciful Maker, who will not turn away from him in any extremity. He notes the fall of a sparrow and numbers the hair of our 15 Works, ed. Nicolay and Hay, II, 574. 36 LINCOLN AND THE BIBLE head, and He will not forget the dying man who puts his trust in Him. 16 Lamon seizes upon this beautiful letter AN unwarranted r INTERPRETATION as a sure sign that Lincoln had no real Christian faith. If ever there was a moment when Mr. Lincoln might have been expected to express his faith in the atonement, his trust in the merits of a living Redeemer, it was when he undertook to send a composing and com- forting message to a dying man. . . . But he omitted it wholly: he did not even mention the name of Jesus, or intimate the most dis- tant suspicion of the existence of a Christ. . . . It is the Maker, and not the Saviour, to whom he directs the attention of a sinner in the agony of death. 17 16 Ibid., I, 165. 17 Lamon, op. cit., p. 497. LINCOLN AND THE BIBLE 37 This certainly is an interesting example of trying to make an unbeliever out of a man who could write so beautiful a letter and refer his dying father to the promises of Christ as found in his address to his disciples (Matt. 10:29-31 ; Luke 12: 6-7). farewell to N or ca n we forget Lincoln's farewell SPRINCFIELD , - . i i • i i o, • /. i i to the friends and neighbors at Springfield, spoken from the rear of the train as he was leaving for Washington, February 11, 1861. After saying that he had a task be- fore him greater than that which rested up- on Washington, he continued: Without the assistance of that Divine Being who ever attended him, I cannot suc- ceed. With that assistance I cannot fail. Trusting in Him who can go with me, and remain with you, and be everywhere for good, let us confidently hope that all will yet be well. To His care commending you, as I hope 38 LINCOLN AND THE BIBLE in your prayers you will commend me, I bid you an affectionate farewell. 18 It is impossible to read such a speech FA,TH during r THE WAR YEARS as this and believe that Lincoln had no real faith in God and in prayer, or that in so grave a crisis in the history of the nation and in his own life he pretended, for the sake of public policy, to speak the language of a faith which he himself did not hold. Certainly the Lincoln of the White House, when the nation was passing through its Gethsemane at Chancellor sville and Gettys- burg, and when he was kneeling in his own Gethsemane at the time of the death of his boy Willie, is a far different Lincoln than the one who was wont to walk into the clerk's office at Springfield, take out a Bible, read a passage, and then proceed to 18 Works, ed. Nicolay and Hay, I, 672. LINCOLN AND THE BIBLE 39 ridicule it and attempt to disprove it in the presence of the young clerks and lawyers. No, the Lincoln of 1861 to 1865 is a man who constantly reads the Bible; is often on his knees; asks others to pray for him; and makes covenants with God, as he did before the battle of Antietam, when he vowed that if God gave the North victory and Lee's army was driven back into Vir- ginia, he would signalize it by proclaiming the emancipation of the slave; and also during the battle of Gettysburg, when he told God that if he "stood by" Meade's army, he, Lincoln, would "stand by" God. not far from It is indeed true that the disinctive thing THE KINCDOM . . . m the Christian faith, a consciousness of sin and a trust in the atoning and redeem- ing work of Christ on the cross, is lacking in the recorded utterances of Lincoln as to his faith. But signs are not wanting that 40 LINCOLN AND THE BIBLE he was on his way to make a public confes- sion of his faith in Christ when the assas- sin's bullet put an end to his probation. When Lincoln ran for Congress in 1846 FAI ™ during against the celebrated frontier preacher, Peter Cartwright, his old friend Mrs. Rankin, living near Salem, had an in- teresting conversation with him about the charges, current during that campaign, that Lincoln was an unbeliever. Deeply stirred, Lincoln answered, referring to his sorrow in the death of Ann Rutledge : There came into my life sad events and a loss that you were close to; and you knew a great deal about how hard they were for me, for you were, at the time, a mutual friend. Those days of trouble found me tossed amid a sea of questioning. They piled big around me. Through all I groped my way until I found a stronger and higher grasp of thought, LINCOLN AND THE BIBLE 41 one that reached beyond this life with a clear- ness and satisfaction I had never known be- fore. The Scriptures unfolded before me with a deeper and more logical appeal, through these new experiences, than anything else I could find to turn to, or ever before had found in them. I do not claim that all my doubts were removed then, or since that time have been swept away. They are not. Probably it is to be my lot to go on in a twilight, feeling and reasoning my way through life, as questioning, doubting Thomas did. But in my poor, maimed, withered way, I bear with me as I go on a seeking spirit of desire for a faith that was with him of the olden time, who, in his need, as I in mine, exclaimed, "Help thou my unbelief. " 19 struccles with It is quite possible, indeed likely, that the DOUBT 1 r ... struggle between doubt and faith in Lin- 19 Sandburg, Abraham Lincoln — The Prairie Years, I, 417. By permission of Harcourt, Brace & Co. 42 LINCOLN AND THE BIBLE coin's soul had something to do with the deep melancholy which at times enveloped him. That was the conviction of Lamon: The fatal misfortune of his life, looking at it only as it affected him in this world, was the influence at New Salem and Spring- field which enlisted him on the side of un- belief. He paid the bitter penalty in a life of misery. 20 Newton Bateman, superintendent for election OF 1860 public instruction for Illinois, occupied a room adjoining and opening into the ex- ecutive chamber of the capitol at Spring- field, which Lincoln used as an office during the presidential campaign. According to Bateman, a few days before the 1860 elect- tion Lincoln came into his office, closed the door against intrusion, and took out a book 20 Op. cit, p. 504. LINCOLN AND THE BIBLE 43 containing a canvass of the city of Spring- field, showing that out of the twenty-three ministers of the gospel only three were going to vote for him, and that most of the prominent church members were against him. When Lincoln made this discovery he wept and declared he did "not understand it at all." Then he took out of his breast pocket a New Testament and, "with a trembling voice and his cheeks wet with tears," quoted it against his political op- ponents generally, and especially against Douglas. "Mr. Bateman," Lincoln said, THE COMING I am not a Christian. God knows I would storm k e one . k u j. j have carefully read the Bible and I do not so understand this book [mean- ing apparently not that the Bible did not tell how to become a Christian, but that the Bible was against slavery]. These men well know that I am for freedom in the territories, free- 44 LINCOLN AND THE BIBLE dom everywhere, as free as the Constitution and the laws will permit, and that my op- ponents are for slavery. They know this, and yet with this book in their hands, in the light of which human bondage cannot live a mo- ment, they are going to vote against me. I do not understand it at all. I know there is a God, and that He hates injustice and slavery. I see the storm coming and I know that His hand is in it. If He has a place and work for me, and I think He has, I believe I am ready. I am nothing, but truth is every- thing. I know I am right because I know that liberty is right, for Christ teaches it, and Christ is God. I have told them that a house divided against itself cannot stand, and Christ and Reason say the same, and they will find it so. When Bateman expressed surprise at HIS TRUE r BELIEFS these statements as to the truth of the Bible and the deity of Christ, and told LINCOLN AND THE BIBLE 45 Lincoln that his friends generally were ignorant that he entertained such senti- ments, Lincoln answered : "I know they are. I am obliged to appear different to them." 21 WAS HIS RELICION TJ^U, XT J it zood politics? ±lerndon and Lamon attack the truthfulness of the alleged statements of Lincoln to Bateman, declaring that they would make Lincoln out a hypocrite, pre- tending to Bateman to hold orthodox views as to the Bible and Christ, which he did not. Yet both of these biographers of Lin- coln, and his close associates, one his law partner and the other his bodyguard at Washington, plainly intimate that in the interests of his political future Lincoln suppressed his freethinking and deistical ideas. 21 Holland, Life of Lincoln, pp. 236-41. 46 LINCOLN AND THE BIBLE Aspiring to lead religious communities, he foresaw that he must not appear as an enemy within their gates; aspiring to public honors under the auspices of a political party which persistently summoned religious people to assist in the extirpation of that which it de- nounced as the "nation's sin/' he foresaw that he could not ask their suffrages whilst aspersing their faith. He perceived no rea- son for changing his convictions, but he did perceive many good and cogent reasons for not making them public. 22 Commenting on the beautiful letter of herndon'S i i . i . /• i • « • i i opinion Lincoln to his dying lather, in which he certainly expresses faith in God and in the future life, Herndon said : The question is, Was Mr. Lincoln an honest and truthful man? If he was, he wrote that letter honestly, believing it. It has to me 22 Lamon, op. cit., p. 498. LINCOLN AND THE BIBLE 47 the sound and ring of an honest utterance. I admit that Mr. Lincoln, in his moments of melancholy and terrible gloom, was living on the border land between theism and atheism — sometimes quite wholly dwelling in atheism ; in his happier moments he was swinging back to theism and dwelling lovingly there. 23 approval of Lincoln was not greatly disturbed, as so DENOMINATIONS many Protestants are today, by the multi- plicity of denominations, but thought it a good thing. In a conversation with Dr. Robert Browne one day, when someone lamented the number of sects, Lincoln said : My good brother, you are all wrong. The more sects we have, the better. They are all getting somebody in that the others could not; and even with the numerous divisions we are all doing tolerably well. 23 Herndon to Abbott, February 18, 1870. 48 LINCOLN AND THE BIBLE It is not a certainty by any means that a quiet time is the best for progress. It is not so by any means in the progress of human liberty or the release of men from supersti- tion and persecution under the forms of re- ligion. The greatest achievements have always come in stirring, fighting times, like those of Luther, Cromwell, and the American Revolu- tion. What we need is not fewer sects or par- ties, but more freedom and independence for those we have. The sects are all right and will get through all right in the end. God is going to be more merciful to men trying to do right than most people think. He is so much more familiar with human frailties than a little sect in any single organization can be, that there is scarcely room for doubt that He will deal more gently with blundering, sinning humanity than the sects would deal with one another. I would rather there were more than less, if one were to hold all the power. Yet sects are right, and should hammer FREEDOM OF RELIGION LINCOLN AND THE BIBLE 49 away until they reach the best that is at- tainable. God intends that men should fight their way to better conditions, and not be lazy or timid, or expect that their passage would be an easy one through the world or beyond in ignorant idleness. We are often confronted with the fear of too many sects, as so many timid people among them so often dread, and wonder which is right and which is best among them. They are all right. HIS RELIGIOUS Think of what the sects drilling so many of HERITACE . , , , - us have passed through, mostly to our advan- tage, as responsible beings. Our people came from the good old Quaker stock, through Pennsylvania, Virginia, and Kentucky. Cir- cumstances took us into the Baptist sect in Indiana, in which several of our people have remained. While there, a good Methodist elder rode forty miles through a winter storm out of his way to preach my mother's funeral sermon at Spencer Creek. Here in Illinois we are with 50 LINCOLN AND THE BIBLE the Presbyterians, where the Methodists are as thick as bees all about us. 24 Whatever ground for debate there may be as to just what Lincoln's religious faith was, there can be no doubt as to the way in which he made use of the Scriptures in his speeches and letters and in his conver- sation with his fellow men. The earliest published utterance of Lincoln was an ad- dress to the people of Sangamon County, March 9, 1832. In this address he spoke of the advantages of "at least a moderate education," so that a man could read the history of his own and other countries and thus appreciate the value "of our free in- stitutions, ... to say nothing of the ad- vantages and satisfaction to be derived 24 Robert Henry Browne, Abraham Lincoln and Men of His Times, II, 427-28. THE BIBLE IN HIS SPEECHES LINCOLN AND THE BIBLE 51 from all being able to read the Scrip- tures." 25 last public ^ s Li nco l n 5 s fi rs t public utterance paid ADDRESS r r a tribute to the Scriptures and the place of religion in the life of the people, so his last public address, delivered on April 11, 1865, to a crowd which had assembled around the White House to celebrate the tidings of the fall of the Confederacy, recognized the providence of God in the nation's life. At the close of this address Lincoln said: "In the midst of this, however, He from whom all blessings flow must not be forgotten. A call for a national thanksgiving is being prepared and will be duly promulgated." 26 Had. he lived to issue that thanksgiving call, there is little doubt that he would 25 Works, ed. Nicolay and Hay, I, 3. 26 Ibid., II, 672. 52 LINCOLN AND THE BIBLE have had in it some appropriate passage from the Bible. Lincoln's faith in the Bible deepened comment on "the . . . ACE OF REASON" with the experiences of his life, especially the tragic experiences of his life at Wash- ington. In a conversation with one of his close friends, Dr. Robert Browne, speaking of Paine's Age of Reason, he said : I have looked through it, carelessly it is true ; but there is nothing to such books. God rules this world, and out of seeming contra- dictions, that all these kind of reasoners seem unable to understand, He will develop and disclose His plan for men's welfare in His inscrutable way. Not all of Paine's nor all the French distempered stuff will make a man better, but worse. They might lay down tons and heaps of their heartless reasonings along- side a few of Christ's sayings and parables, to find that He had said more for the benefit of our race in one of them than there is in LINCOLN AND THE BIBLE 53 all they have written. They might read His Sermon on the Mount to learn that there is more of justice, righteousness, kindness, and mercy in it than in the minds and books of all the ignorant doubters from the beginning of human knowledge. 27 address to A i n an address to the Bible Society of BIBLE SOCIETY . Springfield, Illinois, Lincoln said: It seems to me that nothing short of infinite wisdom could by any possibility have devised and given to man this excellent and perfect moral code. It is suited to men in all the con- ditions of life, and inculcates all the duties they owe to their Creator, to themselves, and to their fellow men. 28 27 Browne, op. cit., II, 426. 28 From a letter of the Rev. James Smith, former pastor of the First Presbyterian Church, Spring- field, to William H. Herndon, January 24, 1867, published in the Springfield Daily Illinois State Journal, March 12, 1867. 54 LINCOLN AND THE BIBLE At the time of the resignation of Salmon AUTH0RITY 0F & THE BIBLE P. Chase as secretary of the treasury, Lincoln, in a conversation with L. E. Chit- tenden, register of the treasury, turning from political matters to religious, paid this tribute to the divine origin of the Bible: The character of the Bible is easily estab- lished, at least to my satisfaction. We have to believe many things which we do not com- prehend. The Bible is the only one that claims to be God's book — to comprise His law — His history. It contains an immense amount of evidence of its own authenticity. It describes a governor omnipotent enough to operate this great machine, and declares that He made it. It states other facts which we fully do not comprehend, but which we cannot account for. What shall we do with them? Now let us treat the Bible fairly. If we had a witness on the stand whose general story we LINCOLN AND THE BIBLE 55 knew was true, we would believe him when he asserted facts of which we had no other evi- dence. We ought to treat the Bible with equal fairness. I decided a long time ago that it was less difficult to believe that the Bible was what it claimed to be than to disbelieve it. It is a good Book for us to obey; it contains the ten commandments, the golden rule, and many other rules which ought to be followed. No man was ever the worse for living according to the directions of the Bible. 29 scripture IN AN The first record of a quotation from the Bible appears in the lecture Lincoln de- livered to the Young Men's Lyceum of Springfield, January 27, 1837. At the end of this lecture, and after one of his char- acteristic tributes to Washington, Lincoln said, referring to the principles which he had enunciated in his speech : "Upon these ,B Chittenden, op. cit., pp. 449-50. 56 LINCOLN AND THE BIBLE let the proud fabric of Freedom rest as the rock of its basis; and as truly as has been said of the only greater institution, the gates of hell shall not prevail against it." (Matt. 16:18.) A fragment from notes he had pre- Niagara falls pared for a lecture in 1850, with a reference to Niagara Falls, shows how he drew upon the Scriptures for illustrations : "When Columbus first sought this conti- nent, when Christ suffered on the cross, when Moses led Israel through the Red Sea, nay, even when Adam first came from the hand of his Maker, then as now, Ni- agara was roaring here." One of the most notable pre-Civil War eulogy on ■ WASHINGTON speeches of Lincoln was the address he delivered before the Washingtonian Tem- perance Society in the Second Presbyte- rian Church at Springfield, February 22, LINCOLN AND THE BIBLE 57 1842. This is the speech which closed with the well-known eulogy on Washington: Washington is the mightiest name on earth. On that name no eulogy is expected. It cannot be. To add brightness to the sun, or glory to the name of Washington is alike impossible. Let none attempt it. In solemn awe pronounce the name and in its native deathless splendor leave it shining on. use of biblical This powerful address has repeated ref- erences to, and quotations from, the Bible. Speaking of the ravages of strong drink, Lincoln likened it to the "Egyptian Angel of Death, commissioned to slay, if not the first, the fairest born of every family.'' (Exod. 12.) Appealing to men to make war on this enemy of mankind, he cried out, "Come, sound the moral resurrection trump that these may rise and stand up, 58 LINCOLN AND THE BIBLE an exceeding great army. 'Come from the four winds, O breath, and breathe upon these slain, that they may live.' " ( Ezek. 37.) Hailing the victories and transforma- tions of the temperance army, he said: Drunken devils are cast out by ones, by sevens, by legions; and their unfortunate victims, like the poor possessed who were re- deemed from their long and lonely wanderings in the tomb, are publishing to the ends of the earth how great things have been done for them. [Mark 5.] Nothing could have been more effective than the use Lincoln made here of Mark's dramatic story of how Christ healed the Gadarene possessed of the legion of devils, who lived "in the tombs, crying, and cutting himself with stones." Urging his hearers to join the Wash- 0N temperance LINCOLN AND THE BIBLE 59 ingtonian Temperance Society, a move- ment which at that time was sweeping the country, and answering the objection which some were making that by joining such a society they would be confessing that they themselves were drunkards, Lincoln said: Surely no Christian will adhere to this objection. If they believe, as they profess, that Omnipotence condescended to take on Himself the form of sinful man, and as such to die an ignominious death for their sakes, surely they will not refuse submission to the infinitely lesser condescension for the tem- poral, and perhaps eternal, salvation of a larger, erring, and unfortunate class of their fellow creatures. political issues J n a speech in the legislature at Spring- field in 1839, opposing a government bank- ing measure, Lincoln spoke of Judas, "the 60 LINCOLN AND THE BIBLE subtreasurer of the Saviour and his dis- ciples," as an example of the danger of dishonesty in government administration. Lincoln strongly opposed the Mexican War as a measure devised by Polk's admin- istration to extend the territory of slavery. Attacking the president in a speech in the House of Representatives, January 12, 1848, Lincoln said of Polk: "He is deeply conscious of being in the wrong; he feels the blood of this war, like the blood of Abel, is crying from heaven against him." (Gen. 4:10.) Lincoln's most famous pre-Civil War "house divided* SPEECH address was that delivered on June 16, 1858, at Springfield, after he had been nominated for the United States Senate by the Republican state convention. This was the "House Divided Against Itself" speech. A short time before he delivered it LINCOLN AND THE BIBLE 61 Lincoln read the speech to his law partner Herndon. At the conclusion of the reading Herndon said to Lincoln: "The speech is a good one, written with great power, and will bring you prominently before the American people. It is in advance of the age, but deliver it just as you have written it." Subsequently Lincoln consulted others about the speech. Some liked it, some did not ; some wanted this sentence struck out, and some that. In the presence of a group of men Lincoln again asked Herndon his opinion of it. Whereupon Herndon said: "Lincoln, deliver and publish your speech just as you have written it. It will make you president of the United States." 30 the words OF What made this speech famous was JESUS Lincoln's powerful use of the words of Jesus to the Pharisees, who, after he had 30 Herndon, op. cit., p. 326. 62 LINCOLN AND THE BIBLE healed a blind and dumb man, charged him with being in league with Beelzebub, the prince of the devils. Answering them Jesus said: "If a house be divided against itself, that house cannot stand. And if Satan rise up against himself, and be divided, he can- not stand, but hath an end." (Mark 3:25- 26.) Applying this to the national situa- tion Lincoln said: A house divided against itself cannot stand. I believe this government cannot endure per- manently half slave and half free. I do not expect the Union to be dissolved — I do not expect the house to fall; but I do expect it to cease to be divided. It will become all one thing or all the other. 31 This idea of a divided house and the A famous result of such division had evidently been 31 Works, ed. Nicolay and Hay, I, 282. LINCOLN AND THE BIBLE 63 in Lincoln's mind for some time, for as far back as 1855, writing to George Robertson, of Springfield, Lincoln said: "Our political problem now is, 'Can we as a nation continue together permanently, forever, half slave and half free?' The problem is too mighty for me. May God in His mercy superintend the solution." earlier use of In 1806 John p arr i s h, in a published THE METAPHOR r comment on slavery, had made use of the same metaphor of the divided house: "A house divided against itself cannot stand: neither can a government or a constitution. This is coincident with the present Chief Magistrate's [Jefferson's] opinion in his notes on the state of Virginia." 32 There is, however, no reason to believe that Lin- coln had ever read the words of Parrish. 32 Masters, Lincoln the Man, p. 270. 64 LINCOLN AND THE BIBLE He undoubtedly got the powerful illustra- tion from his own reading of the Bible, In his speeches in the campaign in 1858, when he ran against Douglas for the Sen- ate, Lincoln frequently drew upon the Bible for telling illustrations. In these speeches he gave what he considered to be the scriptural warrant for opposition to slavery. Defenders of slavery pointed to its existence in the Old Testament dispen- sation, to the fact that there was no prohibition against it in the New Testa- ment, but that, on the contrary, slaves were enjoined to be obedient to their masters, and that Paul himself sent the fugitive slave Onesimus back to his master Philemon at Colossae. As to the recognition of slav- ery in the Bible, Lincoln shrewdly pointed out that it was dangerous to attempt to SLAVERY IN THE BIBLE LINCOLN AND THE BIBLE 65 demonstrate that slavery was right by the Bible, for such slavery was the slavery of white men ; whereas what the advocates of slavery maintained was that the slavery of a black man was right, but the slavery of a white man wrong. 33 the highest j n a S p ee ch at the beginning of the cam- STANDARD . r f S . paign for the Senate Lincoln said that the standard to be sought after was that ex- pressed by Christ in the Sermon on the Mount: "Be ye therefore perfect, even as your Father which is in heaven is perfect." (Matt. 5:48.) The Saviour, Lincoln said, did not expect any human creature to be perfect as the Father in heaven, but set that up as a standard. "So I say in relation to the principle that all men are created 83 Speech at Cincinnati, September 17, 1859, Works, ed. Nicolay and Hay, I, 563. 66 LINCOLN AND THE BIBLE equal, let it be as nearly reached as we can." In a speech at Springfield, July 15, THE L0ST SHEW 1858, referring to what Douglas had said about his having "a proneness for quoting Scripture," Lincoln gave Douglas one more telling quotation from the Scriptures : "Verily, I say unto you, there is more re- joicing in heaven over one sinner that re- penteth than over ninety-and-nine just per- sons that need no repentance." 84 And now if the judge claims the benefit of this parable, let him repent. Let him come up here and say: "I am the only just person, and you are the ninety-nine sinners !" Repentance before for- giveness is a provision of the Christian sys- tem, and on that condition alone will the Re- publicans grant him forgiveness. 84 Here Lincoln did not quote exactly the words of Jesus in either Matt. 18:13 or Luke 15:7. THE CROCODILE BLUNDER LINCOLN AND THE BIBLE 67 In a speech in Kansas in December, 1859, Lincoln said of Douglas and his attitude toward slavery : "In the first place he never says it is wrong. He says he does not care whether it should be voted down or voted up." In a speech at Memphis and else- where Douglas, Lincoln said, told his audi- ence that he was "for the negro as against the crocodile, but for the white man as against the negro." Lincoln made the most of this unfortunate comparison of Douglas, in which he appeared to liken the Negro's relationship to a white man to that of a crocodile to a Negro. 35 Lincoln thought that slavery was wrong, and that Christian charity forbade it: Suppose it is true that the negro is inferior to the white in the gifts of nature. Is it not the 85 Works, ed. Nicolay and Hay, I, 590. 68 LINCOLN AND THE BIBLE exact reverse of justice that the whites should, for that reason, take from the negro any part of the little which he has had given him? "Give to him that is needy" is the Christian rule of charity; but "take from him that is needy" is the rule of slavery. 36 In his eastern tour in I860, speaking at SEEINC behind . & A GUINEA New Haven on March 6, to show how money interests could blind men to the enormity of slavery, Lincoln told of a dis- pute a minister of one of the dissenting churches in England had with a minister of the Established Church over some point of doctrinal difference. To every argument of the dissenting minister the other an- swered: "I can't see it so." The minister then opened the Bible and pointed his adversary to a certain passage ; 86 Fragments from Notes for Speeches, October 1, 1858. LINCOLN AND THE BIBLE 69 but the other replied: "I can't see it so." Then the minister pointed to a single word and asked: "Can you see that?" "Yes, I see it," was the reply. The minister then laid a guinea over the word and asked, "Do you see it now?" Lincoln continued: Whether the owners of this species of pro- perty do really see it as it really is, it is not for me to say. But if they do, they see it as it is through two billions of dollars, and that is a pretty thick coating. Certain it is that they do not see it as we see it. A severe ATTACK Among Lincoln's strongest utterances on the subject of slavery and its iniquity was the letter he wrote to the Rev. Dr. Ide, the Hon. J. R. Doolittle, and the Hon. A. Hubbell, a committee of the American Baptist Home Mission Society, which had 70 LINCOLN AND THE BIBLE presented to him certain resolutions of the society. Lincoln thanked them for thus adding to the effective and almost unan- imous support which the Christians are so zealously giving to the country and to liberty. Indeed, it is difficult to conceive how it could be otherwise with anyone professing Chris- tianity, or even having ordinary perceptions of right and wrong. To read in the Bible as the Word of God Himself that "in the sweat of thy face shalt thou eat bread" [Gen. 3:19], and to preach therefrom, "In the sweat of other men's faces shalt thou eat bread" to my mind can scarcely be reconciled with honest sincerity. When brought to my final reckon- ing, may I have to answer for robbing no man of his goods; yet more tolerable even this than for robbing one of himself and all that was his. When a year or two ago those pro- fessedly holy men of the South met in the semblance of prayer and devotion, and in the THE GOLDEN name of Him who said, "As ye would that all LINCOLN AND THE BIBLE 71 men should do unto you, do ye even so unto them," appealed to the Christian world to aid them in doing to a whole race of men as they would have no man do unto themselves, to my thinking they contemned and insulted God and His Church far more than did Satan when he tempted the Saviour with the kingdoms of the earth. The Devil's attempt was no more false and far less hypocritical. But let me forbear, remembering that it is also written, "Judge not lest ye be judged." [Matt. 7:1.] 37 This is the severest and most intense ut- terance Lincoln ever made on the subject of slavery. callinc A NATION No president ever called the nation to prayer, fasting, and thanksgiving as often as Lincoln did. In his first proclamation of a national fast day, August 12, 1861, he called on the people to "acknowledge 87 Letter to Dr. Ide and others, May 13, 1864. 72 LINCOLN AND THE BIBLE and revere the supreme government of God, to bow in humble submission to his chas- tisements, to confess and deplore their sins and transgressions in the full conviction that 'The fear of the Lord is the beginning of wisdom. 5 " (Ps. 111:10.) Lincoln is the only president who, in invoking the . J \ HOLY SPIRIT a national proclamation, invoked the power and presence of the third Person of the Holy Trinity, the Holy Spirit. He did this in the Thanksgiving Proclamation of July 15, 1863, after the battle of Gettys- burg, when he called upon the people to invoke the influence of his Holy Spirit to subdue the anger which has produced and so long sustained a needless and cruel rebel- lion, to change the hearts of the insurgents, to guide the counsels of the government with wisdom adequate to so great a national emer- gency, and to visit with tender care and con- LINCOLN AND THE BIBLE 73 solation ... all those who . . . have been brought to suffer in mind, body, or estate, and finally to lead the whole nation through paths of repentance and submission of the Divine Will back to the perfect enjoyment of union and fraternal peace. 38 a daily According to William Henry Crook, CUSTOM , m _ . , who for some years was one of President Lincoln's bodyguards: The daily life of Mr. and Mrs. Lincoln usually commenced at eight o'clock, and im- mediately upon dressing the President would go into the library, where he would sit in his favorite chair in the middle of the room and read a chapter or two of his Bible. I think I am safe in saying that this was President Lincoln's invariable custom, at least it was such during the time I was on duty with him. 39 88 Workt, ed. Nicolay and Hay, II, 370. •• Memories of the White House, p. 15. 74 LINCOLN AND THE BIBLE The ordinary daily speech of Lincoln THE BIBLC ,N ,,.,., i . CONVERSATION was salted with timely and apt quotations from the Bible. If a public man were to quote the Bible today as frequently as Lincoln did in the Civil War Days, he would be charged with cant or hypocrisy. But not so then, for the Bible at that time was still the book of the people, which un- fortunately it is not today. To a man who complained bitterly and carelessly against Stanton, the secretary of war, accusing Stanton of not carrying out the order that Lincoln had given two weeks before to have a man liberated from prison who was under sentence of death, but had been pardoned, Lincoln said: "If it had not been for me, that man would now be in his grave. Now, sir, you claim to be a philanthropist. If you will get your Bible and turn to the thir- tieth chapter of Proverbs, the tenth verse, LINCOLN AND THE BIBLE 75 you will read these words: 'Accuse not a servant unto his master, lest he curse thee, and thou be found guilty.' " Thomas F. Pendel, for many years a doorkeeper at the White House, continues this incident: citing CHAPTER Whereupon the man got "huffy" and went away. But as he went out, he said angrily, "There is no such passage in the Bible." "Oh, yes," said Mr. Lincoln, "I think you will find it in the thirtieth chapter of Proverbs and at the tenth verse." This was late in the after- noon, and I thought no more of the occurrence. Next morning I was at Mr. Lincoln's office door as usual, about 8 o'clock, and heard some one calling out: "O Pendleton! I say, Pen- dleton, come in here." When I went inside Mr. Lincoln said to me, "Wait a moment." He stepped quickly into the private part of the house, through what is now the Cabinet Room, but which was then used as a waiting 76 LINCOLN AND THE BIBLE room, and soon reappeared with his Bible in his hand. He then sat down and read to me that identical passage he had quoted to the philanthropist, and sure enough it was found to be in the thirtieth chapter of Proverbs, and at the tenth verse. In those days I was not much of a Bible CREATNESS IN reader. But in 1865 I decided that all-im- $MALL DETA,LS portant question whether or not I should be a follower of the Lord Jesus. I commenced reading a little old Bible that I had bought at a secondhand store and which had belonged to an old soldier. After this I always kept it with me at the White House, and would oc- cupy my odd hours in reading from it. One day I came across that same passage which Mr. Lincoln had quoted to the angry philan- thropist. The whole occurrence came back to me, and I thought what a just man was the president. He was not even willing for me to be in doubt as to his correct quotation of a Bible passage, but must needs take his pre- cious time to prove himself right in my eyes. LINCOLN AND THE BIBLE 77 How simplehearted, yet how truly great a man he was. 40 rain on just When General McClellan once com- plained to Lincoln that rain, mud, and heavy roads had bogged down his army, Lincoln remarked to John Hay that Mc- Clellan "seemed to think, in defiance of Scripture, that heaven sent its rain only on the just, and not on the unjust." (Matt. 5:45.) three Hebrew On a day when visitors at the White CHILDREN _ T «. , -i , i House were telling the president of the many dangers and perils and "breakers" which were threatening the nation and its cause, Lincoln cheered them up by telling them that it reminded him of the schoolboy who could never pronounce the names of 40 Pendel, Thirty-Six Tears in the White House, pp. 25-27. 78 LINCOLN AND THE BIBLE the three Hebrew lads in the book of Daniel: Shadrach, Meshach, and Abed- nego. He had been repeatedly whipped for this, but without improvement. One day as they were reading through the chapter at school he saw that he would have to read these names again in his turn, and, putting his finger on the verse, he turned to his neighbor, an older boy, and whis- pered: "Here come those tormented He- brews again !" 41 In a letter to his friend Joshua S. Speed, strength for .HIS SOUL when he was having his difficult love affair with Mary Todd, Lincoln wrote: I was always superstitious. I believe God made me one of the instruments of bringing your Fanny and you together, which union 41 Carpenter, Six Months at the White House, p. 257. LINCOLN AND THE BIBLE 79 I have no doubt He had foreordained. What- ever He designed He will do for me yet. "Stand still, and see the salvation of the Lord/' is my text just now. (Exod. 14:13.) Thus in one of the greatest texts of the Bible Lincoln found medicine and strength for his troubled soul. pardoning A ^n old father came one day to beseech YOUNC DESERTER . Lincoln to save his son who had been sen- tenced to be shot for desertion. Lincoln read the man a telegram from General Ben Butler protesting against executive inter- ference with army court martials. Lincoln watched for a moment the anguish which showed itself in the face of the old father, and then, exclaiming, "By jingo, Butler or no Butler, here goes," took up a pen and wrote a presidential order that the son was "not to be shot until further orders from me." 80 LINCOLN AND THE BIBLE But the father, when he read it, said: "I thought it was to be a pardon, but you say