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Early American Protestantism. Thesis If individuality and pluralism are valued in American religion, equally valued is religious experience. So, how do.

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Presentation on theme: "Early American Protestantism. Thesis If individuality and pluralism are valued in American religion, equally valued is religious experience. So, how do."— Presentation transcript:

1 Early American Protestantism

2 Thesis If individuality and pluralism are valued in American religion, equally valued is religious experience. So, how do we see distinctively American patterns of religious experience?  Question: what is distinctive about American Protestant experience?  How does this contrast with other American religions? How does it shape other American religions?

3 First Amendment, U.S. Constitution “Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances.”  No mention of God or Creator in Constitution: why not?  Does first amendment protect religion as much (or more) as it protects the state?

4 Changes, 1630s to 1800  Proliferation of alternatives increases value of separation of church and state for religious people  Yields unintentional tolerance (not necessarily engagement)  It “anticipated more clearly the shape that the faith would take in later development of the United States and Canada” (55).  Revivals increase importance of personal experience of God  focus on individual, unmediated experience of salvation  Institution secondary, if necessary at all

5 Proliferation of Alternatives Baptists: “The life of the church should not be governed by the state” (56)  In 1600s New England  In 1600s-1700s southern colonies: challenge to Anglicans  After Great Awakening Rhode Island, Pennsylvania: Protestant Pluralism  Freedom of worship as a right, separation of church and state initiated: why?  Many minority groups: how to relate if there is no one majority? Non-church or para-church options weaken institutions  Leading founders and framers were often Deists  Revivals of (First) Great Awakening

6 Revivals of the Great Awakening (1730s-1740s) What is a revival?  Mass gathering (6,000-8,000) featuring an itinerant preacher not tied to a specific church community  Preaching focused on conversion, emotion New style; split clergy, seminaries, denominations  Later developments (Second Great Awakening) Altar call (early 1800s) Camp meeting

7 Results of Great Awakening Denominational shakeup and proliferation  Splits within denominations  Baptists, evangelicals emerge New model of religious leadership  Growth of lay activity; diminished elite clergy Beginnings of black churches  Autonomous; develop black leadership, empowerment Value on individual experience and “emotional personal faith”  Reaction to Enlightenment, Deism?


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