I think it’s true that AFTER the Emancipation Proclamation,
Whats the Emancipation Proclamation?
Oh yeah, now I remember.
Slavery.
No shit, Sherlock. Except I don’t think you “remember” anything about the Emancipation Proclamation, as evidenced by the balance of your epically idiotic post.
...and two years of horrific war,
So the Emancipation Proclamation came first. Got it.
No, it DID NOT COME FIRST. How dense are you, or how dense do you pretend to be? It came after “two years of horrific war” fought to PRESERVE THE UNION AND NOT TO END SLAVERY.
The Emancipation Proclamation about slavery.
Which, as you probably don’t know because of your hidebound and obstinate ignorance, only said that slave states “still in rebellion” against Union authority would be subject to the ending of slavery in those states AFTER a ninety-day deadline was given. The proclamation was to take effect on Jan. 1, 1863. If, before that day, the states in rebellion returned to the union fold, then NO slaves in those states would be freed. This again ratifies the original point: the war was fought to preserve the union and not to end slavery. By the way, the proclamation DID NOT APPLY to those regions of the south that the north had already subdued and occupied. As to the rest, those states still in rebellion after Jan. 1, 1863, the proclamation did not apply there, either, because those states were still under Confederate control!
...a lot (though far from all or perhaps even most) northerners, especially the soldiers, began to warm to the idea of fighting the war not just to preserve the Union, but also to end slavery.
You think that it took 2 years of fighting for people to finally realise the war was about the Emancipation Proclamation - Slavery.

The Emancipation Proclamation DID NOT EXIST at the start of the war. Lincoln only issued it after nearly two years of fighting. Again, are you really this dense, or just feigning to be? But if the latter, who, here, do you think you are fooling? I feel pretty certain that you are fooling no one here. Maybe you can successfully palm off this idiocy on CARM.
...an afterthought?
*rolls eyes*
Most Americans were Christians. Most Americans did not own slaves. Most Americans agreed with their bible believing President Lincoln that Slavery was wrong.
Yes, we know. That was the REAL meaning of your thread title, as Bilby noted sometime back, which you obscured with weasel words. And it’s false. Most Americans did NOT believe slavery was wrong, and among those who did, almost entirely in the north, few of them were interested in fighting a war to end slavery. They were interested only in fighting a war to PRESERVE THE UNION. Try to recall these three words: PRESERVE THE UNION.
And, as has been explained to you, but to which the density (or disingenuousness?) of your skull is impervious, Lincoln was not a Christian and in fact wrote a tract against Christianity in his youth which his friends destroyed because they feared it would imperil his political aspirations.
The only relevance of the word 'union' here is that the majority (of Christians) were united in this endeavour.
To say that staying united in pursuit of their goal to stay united is a redundant tautology and misses the point.
No. The UNION was the shorthand name for the country as a whole. The north was fighting to preserve the UNION — The United States of America, north and south, as a single political entity — and not to END SLAVERY.
The sad fact for you and your fantasies is this: the majority of CHRISTIANS in America were just fine and dandy with slavery, including practically every single Christian in the south. And all the slaveholders were nice, churchgoing Christians. The north waged the war to preserve the union, and not to end slavery.