Great Awakening 1730s - 1740s.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Sermons of Raw Emotion: The Great Awakening
Advertisements

Contextualization: Deism Influential school of thought during the colonial, revolutionary and early-national periods (17 th – 18 th c) Enlightenment belief.
The Great Awakening Key Terms: revivals Great Awakening
The Great Awakening 1730s-1740s.
How did ideas about religion and government influence colonial life?
 What were the “Old Lights?”  Low church Anglicans  Presbyterians who opposed the extremes of revival  Conservative Pietists who rejected modern ways.
AP U.S. History Mr. Foster THE GREAT AWAKENING. Before 1730s, most colonies had established religions: Congregationalists in New England (basically Puritans)
The 1 st Great Awakening Objective: Interpret contributions of various religious groups to civic principles.
Compare regional differences among early New England, Middle and Southern colonies regarding economics, geography, culture, government and American Indian.
Topic: How did Religious and Intellectual trends change the colonies in the 1700s?

The Great awakening Roots to Revolution. The Great Awakening: CausesEffects.
Colonies Come of Age s. Rise of Slavery First Africans arrived in Jamestown in 1619 treated like indentured servants. Slavery not significant.
The Great Awakening. Religious Interest Wealthy colonists typically belonged to Church of England Other colonists- Quaker, Lutheran Congregationalist,
The Great Awakening A Colonial Source to U. S. Identity.
The Great Awakening and the Enlightenment Ideological Fuel for the American Revolution.
The Great Awakening. The Great Awakening was a religious movement: A religious fervor that swept the colonies in the early 1700s. Emotional not Rational.
Effects of the Age of Reason Aim: How did the ideas of the Enlightenment and the Great Awakening affect 19 th century Americans?
The Great Awakening Chapter 5, Section 4.
American Literature.  In the 1540s there was a push for purification of the church in England.  By the 1570s two groups had emerged:  1) those who.
The Enlightenment and The Great Awakening
The Great Awakening 1730s-1740s.
The Great Awakening 1730s-1740s. 2 What was the Great Awakening? Religious revival movement Evangelicism – “new birth” considered the ultimate religious.
The Great Awakening 1730s-1740s. 2 What was the Great Awakening? Religious revival movement Evangelicism – “new birth” considered the ultimate religious.
TO-Do: 9/28/15 Notes: Great Awakening, Enlightenment, Glorious Revolution CC John Locke QUIZ TOMORROW! CH 3 & 4 ( )
Dominant Denominations Tax-supported colonial churches: Anglican (Church of England) – Virginia Congregational – Massachusetts Presbyterians – side with.
The Great Awakening 1730’s-1740’s
Great Awakening = Religious Revival “one cannot be awakened unless you have fallen asleep” Why do the colonies need a religious revival?
The Great Awakening SWBAT: Examine documents to determine the popularity of the Great Awakening.
VS.  Puritanism dominant early in New England, but other Protestant churches start to form  The Anglican Church is rooted in the South  Catholics and.
The Changing Colonies To what extent did the colonists react to the influx of diversity as well as the interaction caused by the increase in commerce and.
Sermons of Raw Emotion: The Great Awakening Reasons for The Great Awakening Sermons of Raw Emotion The Out Comes of The Awakening.
Sermons of Raw Emotion: The Great Awakening. What was the Great Awakening?  Religious revival movement.  Evangelicalism-- “new birth” is the ultimate.
Today’s Essential Question’s 1.What was the Great Awakening? 2.Why was George Whitefield so popular?
The Great Awakening (1730s-1740s) 1.What was the significance of the Great Awakening in America? 2.In what ways did the Great Awakening prompt Americans.
THE GREAT AWAKENING.
Get out ESSAY to be stamped!
Great Awakening 1730s s.
The Great Awakening 1730s-1740s.
A Series of Religious Revivals in the 18th Century
The 1st & 2nd Great Awakening & the cultural changes in 1800s America
The Great Awakening 1730s-1770s.
Sermons of Raw Emotion: The Great Awakening
The Great Awakening 1730s-1740s.
The Great Awakening 1730s-1740s.
The Great Awakening 1730s-1740s.
Sermons of Raw Emotion: The Great Awakening The Enlightenment
The Great Awakening & Enlightenment
Religion in the Colonies
The Great Awakening 1730s-1740s.
The Great Awakening 1730s – 1760s.
Religion.
The Enlightenment and the Great Awakening
Coming of Age in the Colonies
Sermons of Raw Emotion: The Great Awakening
The Great Awakening 1730s-1740s.
Sermons of Raw Emotion: The Great Awakening The Enlightenment
The Enlightenment.
Great Awakening / Enlightenment
Religion in the Colonies
The Great Awakening!!.
The Great Awakening 1730s-1740s.
Great Awakening 1730s s.
Terrific Thursday, Aug. 20th
COS Standard 2 Part C Compare regional differences among early New England, Middle and Southern colonies regarding economics, geography, culture, government.
The Great Awakening 1730s-1740s.
The Great Awakening 1730s-1740s.
Chapter 3: Colonial Ways of Life
The Enlightenment and The Great Awakening
How did economics and religion impact the colonies?
Presentation transcript:

Great Awakening 1730s - 1740s

What was the Great Awakening? Religious revival movement. Evangelicalism-- “new birth” is the ultimate religious experience. Followers accept that they are sinners and ask for salvation.

Before the Great Awakening Before 1730s, most colonies had established religions: Congregationalists in New England (basically Puritans) Anglicans in New York and Southern Colonies (same as Church of England)

“Old Lights” vs. “New Lights” Churches that grew as a result of the Great Awakening: Presbyterianism, Methodism, Baptism (“New Lights”) Great Awakening challenged authority and hierarchy of established churches (“Old Lights:” Congregationalists and Anglicans). Great Awakening said anyone could be converted or “born again”; you didn’t need traditional church leadership to decide whether or not you belong.

Leaders of the Great Awakening George Whitefield Jonathan Edwards

Why was George Whitefield so popular? Today’s Question: Why was George Whitefield so popular?