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Abraham Lincoln: The Practical Mystic

Chapter 6: The Logic of the Supernatural
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About This Book

The study presents Abraham Lincoln as a practical mystic whose public decisions and private life were influenced by a persistent sense of divine will and spiritual insight. Drawing on contemporary testimonies, anecdotes, and comparative reflections, it explores his mystical experiences, premonitions, and prophetic temperament alongside traits of simplicity, serenity, and intellectual originality. Chapters analyze how unseen influences intersected with law, authority, and moral responsibility, and consider his style, wit, and critical faculties in light of mystical conviction. The work also situates these interpretations within broader discussions of science, destiny, and the moral challenges of leadership.

The Logic of the Supernatural

Judge Henry C. Whitney has asked the following questions:—"By what magic spell was this, the greatest moral transformation in all profane history, wrought? What Genius sought out this roving child of the forest, this obscure flatboatman, and placed him on the lonely heights of immortal fame? Why was this best of men made the chief propitiation for our national sins? Was his progress causative or fortuitous; was it logical or supernatural; was the Unseen Power, or he himself, the architect of his fortune?

"The blunders that were committed by raw and reckless commanders in the field were sufficient to make angels weep, but they were all mosaics in the process of Fate to work out the Divine plan. If we could see the whole scheme of human redemption it would be quite clear to us that not only Abraham Lincoln, U. S. Grant, W. T. Sherman, but equally Jefferson Davis, Robert E. Lee, Stonewall Jackson, and Raphael Semmes were necessary instruments of the great disposer of events—that the bullet which terminated the glorious career of the President was not more surely sped by Fate to its mark than was the bullet which ended the life of Albert Sidney Johnston at Shiloh and which ultimately averted ruin to the Union forces on that blood-stained field, and that in the sublime procession of destiny all events, apparent accidents, calamities, crimes, and blunders were agents of the omnipotent will, now as cause, then as interlude or eddy, anon as effort, all working, apparently, and to human comprehension, fortuitously, but in reality all harmoniously to their Divine appointed end."