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Emerging Tensions in the Colonies Ms. Ramirez U.S. History
THE GREAT AWAKENING Emerging Tensions in the Colonies Ms. Ramirez U.S. History
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The Great Awakening
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Content Standard & Objectives
11.3 Students analyze the role religion played in the founding of America, its lasting moral, social, and political impacts, and issues regarding religious liberty. 2. Analyze the great religious revivals and the leaders involved in them, including the First Great Awakening, the Second Great Awakening, the Civil War revivals, the Social Gospel Movement, the rise of Christian liberal theology in the nineteenth century, the impact of the Second Vatican Council, and the rise of Christian fundamentalism in current times. Objectives Summarize the effects that the religious movement known as the Great Awakening had on colonial society
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Quickwrite: Not One Community, but Many
Some of the first colonies in North America were founded by people looking for a place to practice their religion freely. But instead of creating one large community open to all faiths, the first settlers created a number of different religious communities. Why do you think this happened?
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RELIGIOUS TENSIONS In early 1700s, colonial ministers believed colonists had fallen away from the faith This belief led to the Great Awakening GREAT AWAKENING- A spiritual renewal that swept American colonies in the 1730s-1740s It began in England before catching fire across the Atlantic
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WHAT CAUSED THE GREAT AWAKENING?
Glorious Revolution in England (1688)- left the Church of England as the primary religion Other religions were repressed (Judaism, Catholicism, and Puritanism) Religion became a boring and cold pastime This complacency led to REVIVALISM
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REVIVALISM REVIVAL- A gathering where people are ‘revived’ or brought back to a religious life Four great revivals swept the colonial era as a reaction to this perceived religious apathy
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Revivalism
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REVIVALISM Emphasized on personal conversion and the emotional aspects of religious commitment First wave began in 1730s and peaked in early 1740s Advocates of awakening were known as “New Lights” those who opposed were “Old Lights” Old Lights accused the revival movement of emotionalism and irrationalism
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Revivalism
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Revivalists Preached the terrors of hell to awaken sinners to their need for conversion Many converts separated from established churches to form churches with stricter rules Colonial governments passed laws to keep ‘separation of church and state’
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FIRST GREAT AWAKENING Brought ITINERANT (traveling) preachers such as: George Whitefield and Jonathan Edwards These preachers sought to remind people of the power of God in their sermons Preachers led revivals to encourage people to renew their religious faith
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Itinerant Preachers
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Agitated several divisive issues, including: 1. Itinerant preaching
Great Awakening Agitated several divisive issues, including: 1. Itinerant preaching 2. Church membership qualifications 3. The role of emotion
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Sinners in the Hands of an Angry God
“Oh Sinner! Consider the fearful danger you are in: it is a great furnace of wrath, a wide and bottomless pit, full of the fire of wrath, that you are held over by the hand of that God, whose wrath is provoked and incensed as much against you, as against many of the dammed in hell. You hang by a slender thread.” Jonathan Edwards
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George Whitefield ( ) Preached soul-searching sermons on conversion He adapted commercial techniques, such as newspaper advertising, inexpensive publications, and the deliberate provocation of controversy, to stimulate interest. He spoke charismatically and found in America a receptive audience for his message
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George Whitefield Was known for its “pathetical” or emotional style
He used his powerful oratorial skills to encourage ordinary people to believe that they too, could reach out to God Attracted vast crowds in outdoor assemblies
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Second Great Awakening (1790)
Brought people back to “spiritual life” as they felt a greater intimacy with God. Characterized by great camp meetings, where participants danced in ecstasy Methodists & Baptists opened churches in South and West, uniting blacks and whites Preached universal salvation & perfectibility of society
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Second Great Awakening
Led to the founding of missionary, education, tract, and Bible societies as well as moral reform groups promoting temperance and chastity Participation in moral-reform movements enhanced women’s moral and social authority
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Second Great Awakening
Provided the matrix from which reform movements such as abolitionism, prohibitionism, and the women’s rights movement would come Great Awakening prompts the conversion of many blacks, most of whom are slaves
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EFFECTS of Great Awakening
Rebellion against authoritarian religious rule, later monarchial rule It prepared America for its War of Independence Revivalism taught people that they could be bold when confronting religious authority When churches were not living up to the believer’s expectations, the people could break off and form new ones
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EFFECTS of the Great Awakening
Colonists realized that religious power resided in their own hands, rather than in the hands of the Church of England Colonists realized that POLITICAL POWER DID NOT RESIDE IN THE HANDS OF THE ENGLISH MONARCH, but in their own will for SELF-GOVERNANCE Colonist realized that they all shared a common vision of freedom from British Rule
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What Happens NEXT?
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In Class Assignment Respond to the following prompt, use information from the text and lectures. Also, make sure you state your opinions clearly by providing a detailed explanation for each of your points.
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Fire and Brimstone A religious revival called the Great Awakening swept across the colonies in the 1730s and 1740s, taking the colonists by storm. With their “hellfire and brimstone” sermons, preachers ignited scores of followers, some whom tried to convert the Native Americans and the slaves. A divide separated the older, more traditional clergy and the people who participated in the Great Awakening. The traditionalists were taken aback by the new methods of preaching and by the passionate responses of the people who experienced revival. Why do you think the traditionalists reacted as they did?
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CST Related Questions 1.The First Great Awakening of the 1730’s and 1740’s was primarily a Movement to increase colonial loyalty to the British monarchy. Revival of evangelical religion that spread through the colonies. Process of assimilating immigrants into colonial American culture. Period of economic prosperity brought about by colonial trade.
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CST Related Questions 2. What would be considered a significant social effect of the First Great Awakening? The number of women assuming a leadership role in religious institutions increased. The number of Protestant religious denominations in the colonies declined. The colonies experienced an increase in the number of Catholic immigrants. The colonists began to challenge the hierarchical structure of existing religious denominations.
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