In Religion in American Life: A Short History, three historians divide the religious history of America into three sections in an attempt to demonstrate how in spite of a society lacking uniform beliefs, “religion—beliefs in supernatural powers, forces, and beings—powerfully shaped the peoples and society” of the United States. Jon Butler focuses on religion in colonial America, Grant Wacker on the nineteenth century, and Randall Balmer on the twentieth century. The three authors make an intentional effort to emphasize the people—and not just men who tend to get the lion’s share of credit in religious histories—who have shaped and been shaped by religion in America in their writings. Not only do the authors incorporate diverse views into their analysis, but they also follow up each chapter with excerpts from primary documents expressing religious sentiments; a good number of these give voice to minority and female points of view. Furthermore, unlike many other books on American religious history, this one includes a fair amount of illustrations as primary sources. Drawings and photographs capture the visual dimensions of lived religious life, which adds a rich layer to the authors’ discussions.
Similar to Peter W. Williams’ America’s Religions, the three authors’ Religion in American Life: A Short History proceeds chronologically only to argue that in spite of major changes, there is a continuity of religious tradition that persists in American society. As in the former book so too in this one, the changes are more convincing than the continuities unless speaking in the broadest of terms: such as “amid massive cultural changes…Americans remained incurably religious, however variously defined their religious lives….” However, the authors do �make the important point that even as religion has played a significant role in each century of American history, in “none of these periods does religion occupy the attention of men and women all the time…. Americans have always ordered their lives around the challenges of making a living, rearing children, getting along with neighbors, and pursuing the simple…pleasures of life.” In addition to better qualifying a more convincing image of what is meant by continuity, the authors of A Short History are also able to more clearly compare religion in America across the centuries. For example, building off of Butler’s section, Wacker is able to say that whereas the Great Awakening of the eighteenth century was a relatively passive affair for those being preached to, the Second Great Awakening of the nineteenth century demanded action on behalf of those listening: grace had already been offered to sinners and they simply had to choose to accept it. Similarly, Jon Butler demonstrates that the Revolutionary War was largely a secular affair—with religion as a minor contributing albeit contradictory factor—in contrast to Wacker’s explanation on how the Civil War had religion largely at the forefront of both the arguments made by abolitionists of the North and the Southerners’ justification of slavery leading up to the conflict. Though these generalizations are appropriately fleshed out in their respective chapters, the organization of the book lends itself well to important contrasts among the three time periods examined.