'The Second Awakening" began around 1790 and reached
The Great Awakening was a time right after the enlightenment and a time of empiricism where people were rediscovering God and religion. It was a series of highly emotional revivals of religion. During this time people were actively going out and informing people…
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First, the Great Awakening had a large impact on the Christian community of the early colonies. In the height of the Great Awakening, during the 1730’s and 1740’s it offered the settlers a refresher in their spiritual lives by inspiring the Christians to make their religion a daily process. The Great Awakening was a result due to the loss of belief. One of the biggest impacts the Great awakening had in America was the power of belief that was given to the people, a new passion for the right to worship…
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During the first half of the eighteenth century, there was a spiritual awakening in the American colonies, especially New England. This would be known as The Great Awakening, it would prove to have great influence over the religious and cultural lives of Americans. In earlier generations, the youth that were coming of age, relied on the guidance of others to tell them what to do and how to live their lives. The clergy was some of the people depended on for this. During the first half of the eighteenth…
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In the mid-18th century, the sparks of the Great Awakening were ignited in the Protestant church, starting a fire that would spread across Europe and British America. This is all due to colony-touring Reformed preacher Jonathan Edwards’ fiery preaching, the Puritanical condemnations and convictions of which began the theological backlash against perceived materialism that defined the Great Awakening movement. to Catholicism. Besides refuting materialism, the movement represented many other ideas…
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differences distinguishing them from the British. To begin, America had great economic success. Unlike the British, America had an abundance of land and growth in agriculture that contributed to this success. America’s economy was also more export driven where more than one half of American goods went to Great Britain. While Americans tried to recreate the social structure of Great Britain, differences occurred as a result of the Great Awakening in America. It led to a widespread revival of the evangelical…
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known as the Great Awakening. This movement penetrated all of the colonies and swept across all demographics and denominations.Preachers were using sermons designed to hit emotional nerves that would invoke often dramatic responses. For the first time preachers were using marketing methods and advertising a product which was in high demand. The Great Awakening was a result of a combination of both psychological and emotional fervor that proved to be quite hard to contain. The Great Awakening’s success…
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Movements such as the Great Awakening encouraged settlers to challenge previous religious practices transported with immigrants from Europe. Because immigrants wished to renounce European rule and establish independent colonies, settlers were easily persuaded by evangelists to take part in the Great Awakening movement in an effort to revive religion in the New World. With reinvented religious beliefs and disciplines, the faith spread rapidly through slave plantations: “The Great Awakening helped spread Christianity…
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The Second Great Awakening was very influential in sparking the ideologies of reform in people across America. The Awakening reached its peak in the early 1800s, which was a pivotal point in America. This Great Revival sparked the formation of the abolitionist movement, the women’s rights movement, education reform, numerous religious revivals, and the temperance movement. Social, political and religious transformations altered how Americans thought about their communities, and their rapidly growing…
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The 18th century was not just a time of great religious change in the American colonies but all over Europe as well. Evangelism was religious reaction to the age of enlightenment, “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” (Heyrman). In America, when the Great Awakening began colonist were still worried about the, “economic and political uncertainty accompanying King…
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Enlightenment and the Great awakening both had major effects on the American colonies. The Enlightenment brought new political ideas as well as new way of thinking. The founding fathers also used this new political ideas in how they shaped the American government. An example of this is Thomas Jefferson’s words “Life, Liberty, and the Pursuit of Happiness” which are found in the Declaration of Independence, come from Locke's words “Life, Liberty, and Property.” The Great Awakening also brought new ways…
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