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 	Dear *|MERGE3|* *|MERGE2|*:
 
The “exceptionalist” view of the  American experience is an enduring facet of national politics, reaching back to  colonial times and persisting up to the present. Former vice-presidential  candidate Sarah Palin has become a recent spokesperson for this idea: “America  is a nation of exceptionalism,” she said during her debate with Joe Biden. “We  are a beacon of hope, and we are unapologetic here. We are not perfect as a  nation. But together, we represent a perfect ideal.” 
Exceptionalist rhetoric might strike some as idealistic, and others as chauvinistic. Indeed, advocates of this idea often cast themselves torchbearers of  true American values; while doubters are subject to derision, or labeled as foreign-inspired “socialists.” 
 
Although the contemporary political  banter frequently pushes the boundaries of civility, it pales in comparison to  the wrenching divisions leading up to the Secession crisis in the 1860s. As the  Civil War was concluding, Abraham Lincoln observed that both sides of the conflict  echoed the theme of exceptionalism, since both believed that God was on their side: 
“Neither party expected for the war  the magnitude or the duration which it has already attained. Each looked for an  easier triumph. Both read the same Bible and pray to the same God, and each invokes  His aid against the other,” Lincoln  said in his Second Inaugural address. 
So how could God be on both sides? Lincoln  reframed the question and offered a startling conclusion: Neither side could claim  God’s special favor. “The prayers of both could not be answered. That of  neither has been answered fully. The Almighty has His own purposes,” Lincoln  said. 
Lincoln’s  reflections on the Civil War are further examined in the University   of Massachusetts Press book, Religious Liberty in America:  The First Amendment in Historical and Contemporary Perspective by Bruce T.  Murray. Lincoln’s rhetoric is  analyzed in terms of civil religion – a belief system that binds the nation’s  deepest-held values with transcendent meaning. 
“This book is a splendid presentation of the First Amendment – 'with civil religion as a parallel theme' – especially as presently related to so many issues in American political and religious life. Other books on these issues have been appearing of late, but none as clear and thorough as this one.” 
  — G.H. Shriver, Professor Emeritus, Georgia Southern University  
 
  
 Religious Liberty in America is available at numerous university libraries, and it may be purchased from the University of Massachusetts Press. 
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