1 / 25

The Great Awakenings

The Great Awakenings. Religious Revivals in America. PowerPoint Presentation & Group Activity. Teacher Preparation. Copy 1-per-student: Lecture Notes/Leaders worksheets Copy 1-set-per-group Leaders Placards Approx. Time=55 minutes. Pair-Share. What is a religious revival?

Download Presentation

The Great Awakenings

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The Great Awakenings Religious Revivals in America PowerPoint Presentation & Group Activity

  2. Teacher Preparation • Copy 1-per-student: Lecture Notes/Leaders worksheets • Copy 1-set-per-group Leaders Placards • Approx. Time=55 minutes

  3. Pair-Share What is a religious revival? What ideas did religious groups bring to America?

  4. Objective Students will be able to determine how the First and Second Great Awakenings influenced American culture.

  5. Lecture: The First & Second Great Awakenings Complete the corresponding lecture notes

  6. Religion and America • Many religious groups have influenced American culture. • They have inspired changes in • The way people live. • The laws of the U.S. • The most famous were the Puritans who left England because of religious persecution in 1630.

  7. The Puritans and the Protestant Work Ethic • The Puritans were hard-working because they believed that God rewarded hard work. • This became known as the Protestant work ethic. • The Protestant work ethic influenced American culture by promoting the idea of individual responsibility. • “Only you are to blame when things go wrong in your life.”

  8. Think, Pair, Share • Do you agree that only you are to blame when things go wrong in your life? • Explain your opinion in detail.

  9. First Great Awakening The First Great Awakening occurred between 1730 and 1750 when England was still in control of the 13 Colonies. People tried to revive the religious dedication of Christians in America during this time. Passionate preachers used emotion to persuade people to rededicate themselves to God.

  10. Key Ideas of the First Great Awakening In the process, the First Great Awakening influenced American culture by… Promoting the separation of church and state. Challenging the authority of British leaders. Stressing that everyone is equal in the eyes of God.

  11. Film Clip: First Great Awakening

  12. Think, Write, Pair, Share List two key ideas of the First Great Awakening that you think most influenced the American independence movement in 1776? Explain your answer.

  13. Second Great Awakening The Second Great Awakening occurred between 1790 and 1835 after the U.S. gained independence from England. Like the First Great Awakening, people wanted to revive religious faith in America. People attended revival meetings where they would study the Bible and hear emotional sermons.

  14. Key Ideas of the Second Great Awakening The Second Great Awakening influenced American culture by… Increasing church membership in the United States. Encouraging people to improve themselves and their society. Inspiring anti-slavery organizations throughout the U.S.

  15. Think, Pair, Share What key idea of the Second Great Awakening do you think inspired the creation of anti-slavery organizations throughout the U.S.?

  16. Activity: Leaders of the Great Awakening FourSquare

  17. Leaders of the 1st and 2nd Great AwakeningFour-Square Activity • Each student in your group will be assigned one leader of the Great Awakenings. • Person #1: Jonathan Edwards • Person #2: George Whitefield • Person #3: Charles Grandison Finney • Person #4: Ralph Waldo Emerson • Read about your assigned leader and fill out the corresponding section on your worksheet. • When you are told to do so, rotate the placards to the right and complete your worksheet. • Once you have completed the worksheet for all four leaders you will ask your questions to your group members. Person #1 goes first and then person #2… continue until all students have asked their questions. Make sure ALL team members answers at least one question.

  18. One thing I learned today was ___. Something that I found interesting was __. I never knew that ___. Today I discovered that ___. Now I understand more about ___. Whip Around

  19. Resource Pages

  20. #1 – Jonathan Edwards • Edwards became the most famous preacher of the First Great Awakening. • Like other preachers, he used emotion to persuade his audience. • He believed that in order to be saved by God you must feel your sinfulness, then feel God’s love for you. • His most famous sermon was called, “Sinners in the Hands of an Angry God.” • Create a Level 1 Questions about Edwards.

  21. Whitefield was a preacher from England during the First Great Awakening. Between 1738 and 1769 Whitefield took seven journeys to the American colonies. Whitefield was known for giving emotional sermons that would bring people to tears. #2 – George Whitefield • Create a Level 2 Questions about Whitefield.

  22. #3 – Charles Grandison Finney • Finney was a preacher during the Second Great Awakening. • Finney stressed that people must improve themselves and their society. • Finney was involved the anti-slavery movement. • During his sermons, Finney would often condemn slavery. • Create a Level 3 Questions about Finney.

  23. #4 – Ralph Waldo Emerson • Emerson was a former minister during the Second Great Awakening. • Emerson developed a philosophy called transcendentalism. • Transcendentalists believed that truth can be found in nature and in a person’s own emotions. • Create a Level 1 Questions about Emerson.

More Related