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Lincoln hoped for a “new birth of freedom” in America. What would that mean today?

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Lincoln hoped for a “new birth of freedom” in America. What would that mean today?

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Guelzo: It’s interesting that a man of such meager public religious profile should resort to religious language in his most famous speech, but that’s exactly what this “new birth of freedom” is. In fact, the Gettysburg Address is shot full of religious language. What a “new birth” meant since the two great religious Awakenings in America (in the 1740s and again in the 1820s) was a complete spiritual renewal – literally, being “born again.” Lincoln borrows the terminology, and lifts the energy, the transformation, and the dedication to God that this new birth implies, and transfers it to a renewal of our commitment as citizens to popular government. SHARETHIS.addEntry({ title: “Abraham Lincoln FAQ: Part One”, url: “http://blog.oup.

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