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BOOKS: The North, the South, and God
By Ross Douthat
Ross Douthat on Upon the Altar of the Nation: A Moral History of the Civil War by Harry S. Stout
Harry S. Stout. Upon the Altar of the Nation: A Moral History of the
Civil War. Viking.
576 pages. $29.95
T
he
civil war was Christendom’s
last religious war. Not the last war in which both combatants
invoked the blessings of the Christian God but the last in which so
many people on both sides believed themselves to be dying not only
for blood and soil or treaty obligations, but for a point of
Christian principle. If the North had the better of the argument
over whether Christianity demanded slavery’s end, Southerners
had perhaps more fervor in their conviction that it didn’t.
And both sides saw their work as a correction of America’s
insufficiently religious founding — the North implicitly, in
its faith-infused campaign to wipe out the original sin of
slaveholding; the South explicitly, to the point of appealing to
“the favor and guidance of Almighty God” in its
refashioned Constitution, correcting the error of the “deists
and atheists” who wrote the original.
The North won the war, but both sides saw their
hopes at least partially fulfilled. Slavery was ended, but the
religious rebirth that the South had sought was accomplished as
well, albeit perhaps not in the fashion Southerners had prayed for.
America was refounded, in a sense, and the second founding was more
theological than the first, explicitly defining America as a
God-chosen people, a new Israel that like its predecessors embodied
humanity’s hope and history’s redemption. In the
political theology of Abraham Lincoln’s Second Inaugural, and
in the civic religion he helped inspire, America is both the
longed-for messiah and the humanity he came to judge and save: We
were chastised by a just God for our sins, the better to rise to
save the world.
The rhetoric worked, the theology took hold,
and as a result Americans tend to see the Civil War through a
Lincolnian glass, brightly — with malice toward none and
charity for all, and with equal affection for righteous Yanks and
noble Rebs, both sides dying that we might all be free. There is
grandeur in this view, but dishonesty as well — and not only
because it long allowed the South to wallow in nostalgia and the
North in triumphalism while the work of emancipation was left
half-done. It also allowed the national memory to elide the
specific excesses of the Civil War. The judgment of the Lord may
have come upon the United States in the 1860s, as Lincoln had it, but
there were many individual judgments as well, which set homes
ablaze, sent soldiers to certain death, tolerated rape and murder,
and abandoned prisoners of war to hellish concentration camps. The
time for recriminations is long past, but the time for an
accounting isn’t.
Such an accounting is what the Yale historian
Harry S. Stout attempts in his Upon the
Altar of the Nation: A Moral History of the Civil War, which takes up the question of wartime justice
— not the ultimate justice of the North’s cause or the
South’s, but the more immediate day-to-day concerns of orders
given, raids carried out, and atrocities committed. It takes up, as
well, the question of how leaders on both sides dealt with issues
of jus in bello and whether, in the heat of the bloodiest war in
American history, there were any people willing to take a
dispassionate view of the conflict, to speak out against their own
side’s abuses, and to question the assumption that God was
entirely on one side or the other.
The answer, to Stout’s seeming surprise
though probably not the reader’s, is almost universally no.
The religious language of the war, in particular, was nearly always
the language of the jeremiad, in which God guarantees victory to
the righteous and ruin to their enemies, and battlefield success is
linked to piety and failure to apostasy. The preachers of the Civil
War era, North and South, were light-years removed from the
presumption toward pacifism that dominates contemporary religious
discourse, and nearly every pulpit — as Stout demonstrates in
often-exhaustive detail — rang with appeals to heaven for
victory and with assurances that God smiled on the preservation of
the Union or its dissolution, the abolition of slavery or its
extension to the Pacific.
S
tout
calls this the “cultural
captivity of the churches,” and it’s one of the major
themes of the book, returned to repeatedly as the war — and
his account of it, which recapitulates at unnecessary length the
work of previous historians — drags on and the North’s
jeremiads grow more confident, the South’s more desperate and
apocalyptic. A second theme is the brutal reality that these
jeremiads ignored, both the specific war crimes — rapine and
murder, the inhumane conditions in both Confederate and Union
prisons, the criminal stupidity of the commanders who sent men to
die at Marye’s Heights and Gettysburg and Cold Harbor —
and the general policies that made them possible. In particular,
Stout trains his fire on Lincoln’s decision to abandon the
old West Point code of military conduct in favor of a more
latitudinarian policy, one that countenanced seizing civilian
property and destroying civilian homes. This willingness to expand
the war beyond the battlefield, he argues, and the Confederate
willingness to respond in kind, marked the beginning of the modern
concept of total war. The Lincolnian policy stopped short of
allowing assaults on civilians themselves, but its logic led in a
darker direction, and in the wreckage of Georgia lay the seeds of
the twentieth century’s wartime horrors.
This is a debatable argument but a compelling
one. Compelling, too, is Stout’s detailed explication of how
the jeremiad gave way to Lincolnian political theology, how the
civil religion of contemporary America was born in the charnel
house of Shiloh and Antietam. But his writing is clumsy and
repetitious, and his themes are often left half-developed while he
rushes on to the next battle, the next jeremiad, and the next
moment when, more in sorrow than in anger, he can point out that
yet again Yankees and Confederates failed to live up to their own
standards, failed to admit any moral nuance, failed to see the
conflict as anything but black and white.
It’s not that this analysis is wrong,
precisely, but it feels incomplete and at times obtuse. Stout
judges the Civil War’s actors, but he doesn’t work hard
enough to understand them — and in particular, by
deliberately tabling the question of jus
ad bello, he fails to grapple with the
underlying realities that made once-unthinkable slaughter and
savagery seem not only necessary but just. The bloodiness of the
conflict, the bellicosity of the preachers, the suffering that the
Northern armies eventually wreaked on the crumbling South —
none of these is explicable without a consideration of how high the
stakes seemed to be on both sides, how firmly each believed that
not only their own nation’s survival but civilization itself
depended on the outcome.
U
pon
the Altar of the Nation is written in a tone of above-the-fray moralism, and
the condescension grows wearisome. Yes, terrible things were done
and reckless things were said, but they were said and done by
people very much in the fray, people who felt that they were engaged in a
world-historical struggle — and who were right to think so.
The North fought to preserve the modern world’s first
experiment in democratic self-government and to rid that experiment
of a great evil; the South fought to preserve its own political
order and its beloved way of life, however tainted both may seem to
us now. The crimes were inexcusable, but they were perhaps an
inevitable result of the sense that more was at stake in the
struggle than in almost any war before or since.
So, for instance, when Stout praises an
ineffectual figure like George McClellan for objecting to
Lincoln’s decision to take the war to the Confederate
infrastructure — to farms and towns and homes — he
skirts the fact that McClellan was eager to criticize Lincolnian
tactics precisely because he didn’t think of the war in the
same terms as Lincoln, didn’t consider victory as necessary
or defeat as terrible. Or again, when Stout remarks sorrowfully
that “no moralists moved” to speak out against the
terrible bloodletting of Grant’s Virginia campaign, he leaves
unresolved the problem that such bloodletting won the war for the
Union and did more to remove the evil of slavery than all the
“highest principles of Christian civilization” that
McClellan championed and Lincoln and Grant compromised.
In this, Stout sidesteps the central paradox of
the conflict and of many conflicts since — namely, that the
more moral a war seems to be at the outset, the greater the moral
compromise it may eventually require. A war entered for limited,
national-interest aims can be fought in a limited fashion and
brought to an end once certain objectives have been attained. But
when you heighten the moral purpose of a war, you raise the stakes
as well, to the point where any conclusion short of victory feels a
failure and any means appears to justify a triumphant end.
Upon the Altar of the Nation repeatedly founders on this contradiction. Stout wants to
praise Lincoln for the Emancipation Proclamation, for instance,
while blistering the North for its refusal to abandon the
“central cultural principle of white supremacy and the
politics of apartheid.” Yet this fine-sounding moralism is in
tension with his eagerness to criticize Lincoln for allowing the
old West Point code to be suspended, to blame Grant for never
blinking at the cost in blood of his “if it takes all
summer” strategy, to condemn Sherman for the suffering sown
by his March to the Sea. What Stout never seems to consider is that
it was precisely because the war changed in the Northern imagination
from a limited struggle to a moral crusade — for
emancipation, at least, if not equality — that it eventually
seemed necessary not only to defeat the South but to conquer it, to
end not only a government but a way of life. The more noble the
war’s purposes, the greater the necessity to carry on to
victory, no matter the cost — and the greater the necessity,
too, that the South should not only lose but howl. The excesses of
Sherman’s March to the Sea were implicit in the logic of the
Emancipation Proclamation and the noble phrases of the Second
Inaugural.
This paradox extends beyond the battlefields of
the Civil War to any conflict that seeks a kind of cosmic justice
or takes on the flavor of a crusade. The ends don’t justify
the means, but if your ends seem important enough — the end
of slavery in the nineteenth century, the defeat of Nazi Germany or
Imperial Japan in the twentieth — well, which leader is
prepared to sacrifice jus ad bello for the sake of jus in
bello and lose a greater justice
for a smaller one? If you’re fighting to “end all
wars” or to “end evil” — to borrow one of
the more sweeping definitions of our present conflict — then
doesn’t every weapon need to be considered, every measure
allowed?
T
hese
are the questions that American
policymakers have been wrestling with for more than a century, from
tr and
Wilson to lbj and George W. Bush. The debates over Hiroshima and
Dresden are the extreme cases, of course, but the paradox is
visible as well in the daily compromises and contradictions of our
occupation of Iraq, where our sweeping, idealistic goals have
dirtied our hands more than, say, the more cold-blooded First Gulf
War ever did. On a case-by-case basis, the abuses on display in Abu
Ghraib and elsewhere were of course avoidable — but in the
aggregate, tactics that violate “the highest principles of
Christian civilization” are an almost-inevitable part of any
occupation, any counterinsurgency, any serious attempt to reshape a
dysfunctional society.
Our occupations of Japan and Germany 50 years earlier
were cleaner, but we had done to those countries what Sherman did
to Georgia, only more so — destroying not only armies but
entire societies, which once flattened were easier to rebuild.
It’s this reality that led Max Boot to remark recently that
we might have been better off in Iraq had the initial invasion been
more brutal. Instead, he noted, “the U.S. was so sparing in
its use of force that many Baathists never understood they were
beaten. The butcher’s bill we dodged early on is now being
paid with compound interest.”
This point of view feels unacceptable and even
odious, since accepting its implications would mean abandoning the
idea of jus in bello entirely and enthroning in its place a kind of
bloody-minded consequentialism. Yet the seeming alternatives
— an unblinking realpolitik, a sweeping pacifism, or the kind
of purer-than-thou idealism that Stout offers, with its lack of
realism about the costs and necessities of war — are hardly
more palatable.
A decade after Appomattox, faced with a
situation similar to ours in Iraq — a society half-reshaped
and restive, a low-level insurgency, a mounting financial cost
— the North elected to abandon Reconstruction, return power
to the defeated slaveholders, and forsake the people it had fought
a war to free. For a long time they were praised for it by
pro-Southern historiographers who saw Reconstruction the way the
Left sees the Iraqi occupation, as an overzealous attempt to impose
a way of life by force on an unwilling culture. Later it was
pointed out that Reconstruction was hardly worse than the apartheid
that came after and that perhaps the North should have stayed
longer and done more to root out the pathologies of the conquered
South.
The choice is no easier in hindsight than it
was in 1876.
Nor are other wartime dilemmas: People are still arguing over
Hiroshima 50 years
later; they will still be arguing over Iraq a century hence.
Just-war theory is a noble attempt to ease the tensions between
Christian ethics and the nature of warfare, but neither Christians
nor armchair statesmen should pretend that these tensions
don’t exist. The choice between justice and necessity, or a
greater justice and a smaller one, is perhaps the most difficult
that any nation faces, and where we differ on which end to choose
we would do well to heed Lincoln’s admonition and judge not
lest we be judged.
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