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Jonathan Edwards. The Great Awakening  What historians call “the first Great Awakening” can best be described as a revitalization of religious piety.

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Presentation on theme: "Jonathan Edwards. The Great Awakening  What historians call “the first Great Awakening” can best be described as a revitalization of religious piety."— Presentation transcript:

1 Jonathan Edwards

2 The Great Awakening  What historians call “the first Great Awakening” can best be described as a revitalization of religious piety that swept through the American colonies between the 1730s and the 1770s.

3 The Great Awakening  That revival was part of a much broader movement, an evangelical upsurge taking place simultaneously on the other side of the Atlantic, most notably in England, Scotland, and Germany.

4 The Great Awakening  In all these Protestant cultures during the middle decades of the eighteenth century, a new Age of Faith rose to counter the currents of the Age of Enlightenment, to reaffirm the view that being truly religious meant trusting the heart rather than the head, prizing feeling more than thinking, and relying on biblical revelation rather than human reason.

5 The Great Awakening  The earliest manifestations of the American phase of this phenomenon—the beginnings of the First Great Awakening—appeared among Presbyterians in Pennsylvania and New Jersey.

6 The Great Awakening  Led by the Tennent family—Reverend William Tennent, a Scots-Irish immigrant, and his four sons, all clergymen—the Presbyterians not only initiated religious revivals in those colonies during the 1730s but also established a seminary to train clergymen whose fervid, heartfelt preaching would bring sinners to experience evangelical conversion.

7 The Great Awakening  Originally known as “the Log College,” it is better known today as Princeton University.

8 The Great Awakening  Religious enthusiasm quickly spread from the Presbyterians of the Middle Colonies to the Congregationalists (Puritans) and Baptists of New England.

9 The Great Awakening  By the 1740s, the clergymen of these churches were conducting revivals throughout that region, using the same strategy that had contributed to the success of the Tennents.

10 The Great Awakening  In emotionally charged sermons, all the more powerful because they were delivered extemporaneously, preachers like Jonathan Edwards evoked vivid, terrifying images of the utter corruption of human nature and the terrors awaiting the unrepentant in hell.

11 The Great Awakening  Hence Edwards’s famous description of the sinner as a loathsome spider suspended by a slender thread over a pit of seething brimstone in his best known sermon, “Sinners in the Hands of an Angry God.”

12 INTRODUCING THE SERMON What keeps you IN LINE? A sense of morality probably keeps you from cheating on a test. In other words, you know cheating is wrong.

13 INTRODUCING THE SERMON What keeps you IN LINE? But there are other reasons for behaving morally. Some people are anxious to please. Others fear the consequences of breaking the rules. Jonathan Edwards uses fear to get his point across in the sermon Sinners in the Hands of an Angry God.

14 Persuasion Puritan theologian Jonathan Edwards delivered powerfully persuasive sermons. As in all persuasive writing, an Edwards sermon is shaped by the author’s purpose, his audience, and his context— that is, his reason for preaching, his Puritan congregation, and the times in which the Puritans lived.

15 Persuasion One of Edwards’s most prominent rhetorical or persuasive techniques is the use of biblical allusions— references to figures, events, or places in the Bible that he assumed his congregation would recognize. As you read Edwards’s sermon, look for passages that reveal how purpose and audience affect the tone of his sermon.

16 fear, which taps into a fear of losing one’s safety or security Emotional appeals are messages designed to persuade an audience by creating strong feelings. They often include sensory language to create vivid imagery and loaded words to create these types of feelings: pity, which draws on a sympathy or compassion for others guilt, which relies on one’s sense of ethics or morality Analyze Emotional Appeals

17 As you read, use a chart like the one below to record examples of language that appeals to the emotions. “arrows of death fly unseen” ExamplesEmotional Appeals appeals to fear by creating anxiety, unease Analyze Emotional Appeals


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