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Beginnings of the Second Great Awakening

2. Changing Face of the Parish . The Second Great Awakening was a Protestant religious movement marked by the emergence of revivalism and evangelical doctrine.It was a reaction to the intellectualism of the Enlightenment. Protestant preachers began emerging throughout America, ushering in revivals which saw converts in the thousands. The Second Great Awakening should be understood in the context of a great migration west as well as a new fascination with the American wilderness. Seizing the 9441

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Beginnings of the Second Great Awakening

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    1. 1 Beginnings of the Second Great Awakening

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    3. 3 James McGready The Second Great Awaking brought the realization that the notion of the parish had to be reapplied to the changing times. James McGready understood this and became instrumental in sparking the Second Great Awakening. McGready hosted what became known as frontier camp meetings Frontier camp meetings were loosely organized church meetings in which preachers delivered informal sermons to large, non-affiliated congregations. Many conversions took place during these camp meetings.

    4. 4 Cane Ridge Revival Cane Ridge became the site of the largest Protestant revival movement of the time and inspired hundreds of similar revivals to spring up in its wake. The revival was led by Presbyterian preacher Barton Stone. At any given time 3 or 4 preachers would be delivering sermons. Barton Stone later led a movement which would see the splintering of the Presbyterian church known as the Stone-Campbell movement.

    5. 5 Peter Cartwright Peter Cartwright, a Methodist, worked closely in Logan County with James McGready. Cartwright was known for his creative ways to convince the frontier people of his religious commitment. Cartwright disliked the idea of universal salvation. He wrote about the Cane Ridge Revival in great detail. He described the ecstatic nature of the Cane Ridge revival, including the emergence of "jerking", a sort of convulsing common during the camp meetings.

    6. 6 David Purviance David Purviance had far reaching influence in the Presbyterian church. Purviance was moved by the work of James McGready and aimed to replicate his success. He was eager to spread his Presbyterian message into politics. Purviance ran into great difficulty gaining political support due to his strong anti-slavery stance, indicative of rising Protestant liberalism. Purviance was from Cane Ridge and also wrote on the revival there.

    7. 7 The Temperance Movement

    8. 8 Media Citations Slide 2: http://www.ilstu.edu/~keciani/images/secondgreatawakening261.jpg Slide 3: http://www.cumberland.org/hfcpc/minister/HALSELJM.JPG Slide 4: http://www.cts.edu/ImageLibrary.disciple_early_19th.cfm Slide 5: http://lincoln.lib.niu.edu/cgi-bin/getobject_?c.1885:1./lib35/artfl1/databases/sources/IMAGE/ Slide 6: http://www.therestorationmovement.com/images/Purviance,David00a.jpg Slide 7: http://www.hds.harvard.edu/library/exhibits/online/hdspublicministry/typetalk.html

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