
“Lincoln was not an orthodox Christian,” Meacham writes. His philosophical and religious views drew from the King James Bible, the Declaration of Independence, and New England Transcendentalists Theodore Parker and Ralph Waldo Emerson. Lincoln had only about a year of formal education.

There are a thousand ways of getting at a man if it is desirable that he should be killed.” “If I wore a shirt of mail, and kept to myself surrounded by a body-guard, it would be all the same. “I long ago made up my mind that if anybody wants to kill me, he will do it,” he said later.

A different version of that struggle continues today.

In Lincoln’s time, the struggle between freedom and slavery, darkness and light, good and evil divided the nation. … The fiat of the Almighty, ‘Let there be Light,’ has not yet spent its force.”

The title, And There Was Light: Abraham Lincoln and the American Struggle, refers to a quote from Black abolitionist Frederick Douglass: “I do not despair of this country. Jon Meacham, the Pulitzer Prize-winning historian, has written a biography of Abraham Lincoln that offers not only a compelling portrait of his spiritual journey on the road to emancipation but also enduring lessons for our divided country today.
