Comes Wisdom to Us

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**Abraham Lincoln, a skeptic and lifelong depressive, never assumed that God was on the Union’s side but accepted divine will.

**By Joshua Wolf Shenk http://images.beliefnet.com/imgs/x.gif http://images.beliefnet.com/imgs/x_ccc.gif Abraham Lincoln shows how suffering can be bound up with spiritual purpose. He sank so deeply into that suffering and came away with a felicitous blend of humility and determination. Whatever ship carried him on life’s rough waters, Lincoln came to believe that he was not the captain but merely a subject of the divine force—call it fate or God or the “Almighty Architect” of existence. Yet, however humble his station, Lincoln knew himself to be no idle passenger but a sailor on deck with a job to do. In his strange mix of deference to divine authority and willful exercise of his own meager power, Lincoln achieved transcendent wisdom, the delicate fruit of a lifetime of pain.
 
One could ask the same thing of Thomas Jackson or Robert E. Lee. Both of these men were strong in faith as well. One of the greatest things we as 21st century Americans have to deal with is that men and women on both sides of the War were people of faith. What a difference between 1861 and 2006.
 
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