Christ, Church, and Country

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A01=Gwion Wyn Jones
American Christianity
American Civil War
American Protestantism
American religion
American South
American West
Astor
Author_Gwion Wyn Jones
Baptists
capitalism
Category=NHK
Category=QRM
Category=QRMB3
Category=QRVS4
charity
children's philanthropy
Christian missionaries
Christianity
church history
church-building
churches
Civil War North
Congregationalists
consolidation
domestic missions
Episcopalians
eq_bestseller
eq_history
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
forthcoming
Freedmen
frontier
fundraising
Gilded Age
home missionaries
Home missions
Methodists
missionaries
moral capital
nation-building
nationalism
Northern states
philanthropy
Presbyterians
Protestantism
Reconstruction
religion
religion and money
religious fundraising
religious giving
religious nationalism
religious periodicals
respiritualization
Rockefeller
settlers
spiritual economy
Unionism
Vanderbilt
women's history

Product details

  • ISBN 9780813956107
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 08 Dec 2026
  • Publisher: University of Virginia Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
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A history of the home mission movement and a window on the roots of Christian nationalism

In the decades after the American Civil War, men, women, and children across the Northern United States bankrolled a continental effort to create a homogenous Protestant republic through the home mission movement—a domestic counterpart to foreign missions abroad. This book provides the first multidenominational account of post–Civil War home missions by focusing on the thousands of ordinary Americans who supported them spiritually, emotionally, and—above all—financially. These benefactors believed that through subsidizing the soul saving of their fellow countrymen, they would receive spiritual blessings of their own. Millions of dollars' worth of this so-called moral capital crisscrossed the nation, creating a "spiritual economy" that Northern Protestants hoped would reunite the republic and bind it for all time.

Christ, Church, and Country tells the story of a nation still reeling from the shock of the Civil War embarking upon a period of unprecedented economic growth and demographic transformation—convulsions that encouraged many Americans to use religious benevolence as a tool to bring greater coherence not only to the republic but also to their own disordered selves.

Gwion Wyn Jones is a Leverhulme Research Fellow at the Rothermere American Institute, University of Oxford.

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