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Historical Effects of the Great Awakening

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Viewing 14 posts - 1 through 14 (of 14 total)
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  • February 25, 2008 at 4:09 pm #990 Reply
    History Guy
    Participant

    I am a home school Junior in high school, and I have an assignment to right a research paper on the historical effects of the Great Awakening. If anyone has some of the main historical effects I would be grateful. 🙂

    February 26, 2008 at 1:18 pm #10707 Reply
    Phidippides
    Keymaster

    Hi History Guy, and welcome.  Did you see my other site at http://www.great-awakening?  It's got some information regarding the effects the Great Awakening had on the consciousness of the Colonists during the 18th Century which I argue contributed toward a particular disposition in regard to the England.  Perhaps I should not go too much into detail if the assignment requires you to do the research, but I can give you an overview of what the site says to help you get started.  Basically the Awakening created a tendency to question authority within the Colonists.  While this kind of questioning was religious in nature as churches broke away from other churches, it was transferred over into politics as well.  Eventually, the desire to effectively control one's own religious destiny turned into desire to control one's own political or governmental destiny.  But please, do visit the site I gave the link to and check out some of what is there.  There is a list of reading sources at http://www.great-awakening.com/sources.htm and I'm sure one of the other posters here can list some good books for your level if you would like to read more. 

    February 26, 2008 at 4:52 pm #10708 Reply
    History Guy
    Participant

    All right thx allot, and I will visit the site.  ;D

    March 1, 2008 at 5:38 am #10709 Reply
    DonaldBaker
    Participant

    Ahem, I think I'm being qued here….History Guy, welcome to the forum.  If you need some source material, I am the guy you need to get in contact with.  My email address is djbjr@bellsouth.net.  Basically what Phid said is true in a very concise way.  The Great Awakening opened up religion to the common man in ways Anglicanism (The Church of England) would not allow.  Once the common man found a niche for himself spiritually, he was sure to find it politically down the road.  The revivals of the Great Awakening initiated a slow, but persistent change in how colonials felt about their society and its relationship with the mother country.  It was the first inter-colonial event that helped to bond the colonies in ways that had previously not been the case.  Now you take this and run with it, and like I said, if you need some source material, I can definitely help you out there.

    March 7, 2008 at 3:18 pm #10710 Reply
    Wally
    Participant

    Sorry but I think we're being a bit hard on the kid here… we (read me) all make slips like that… opps, pardon… and carry-on. Just my $0.02.Hang in there History Guy; I didn't really get the GA until recently. Very deep in political and social significance as well as religion.Cheers,Wally

    March 17, 2008 at 2:30 pm #10711 Reply
    History Guy
    Participant

    Thank you for the information, it has been very helpful. Yes my grammar if despicable. 

    March 18, 2008 at 2:45 am #10712 Reply
    Wally
    Participant

    Don't be too hard on yourself at that time of the day, eh?

    April 6, 2008 at 5:23 pm #10713 Reply
    BensGal
    Participant

    I absolutely loved studying the Great Awakening, George Whitefield and the effects of both on the colonies. Colonial society was becoming so fluid that it could not continue with its rigid concept of predestination much longer. The acceptance of a market economy, increase in immigration and land shortages all contributed to this new era in Colonial history, imo.

    April 7, 2008 at 12:08 am #10714 Reply
    DonaldBaker
    Participant

    I absolutely loved studying the Great Awakening, George Whitefield and the effects of both on the colonies. Colonial society was becoming so fluid that it could not continue with its rigid concept of predestination much longer. The acceptance of a market economy, increase in immigration and land shortages all contributed to this new era in Colonial history, imo.

    Careful now….the Great Awakening was an event that sought to reconcile Calvinism (predestination/providence) by the outward show of emotions as proof of the New Birth.  Predestination was not discarded or rejected, but merely redefined in such a way as to allow people some room for earthly assurance that indeed they were among the elect.  Quite simply, the Great Awakening changed the way many viewed salvation as not something that happens when we die, but something that occurs while we live, and the release that such salvation knowledge brings is both powerful and joyous to those who once feared God's judgment hanging over them. 

    April 7, 2008 at 2:34 am #10715 Reply
    BensGal
    Participant

    I think I see my error…and I'll admit I'm having to go back to my class notes, etc., to understand where my wires are crossed on this topic.

    September 11, 2008 at 12:44 am #10716 Reply
    Phidippides
    Keymaster

    Careful now….the Great Awakening was an event that sought to reconcile Calvinism (predestination/providence) by the outward show of emotions as proof of the New Birth.

    So what you are saying is that the “Signs of the Elect” from Calivinist theology were essentially manifested in the revivalism of the Colonists who “participated” in the Great Awakening?  I don't understand why you use the phrase “reconcile Calvinism…by the outward show of emotions…” since that was one of the teachings put forth by Calvin some 150 years beforehand.  Perhaps I'm not understanding something here.

    Quite simply, the Great Awakening changed the way many viewed salvation as not something that happens when we die, but something that occurs while we live, and the release that such salvation knowledge brings is both powerful and joyous to those who once feared God's judgment hanging over them.

    Now as far as I'm aware Calvin said man could not know whether or not he was saved, though reading the “signs” could give some indication.  Are you saying here that the Colonists of the Great Awakening took this one step forward by claiming they now actually possessed knowledge of their salvation?

    September 11, 2008 at 7:43 pm #10717 Reply
    DonaldBaker
    Participant

    Pertaining to the first part of your post, I was referring to colonists who rejected the rigidity of Calvinism/Puritanism who preferred outward signs to signify the obtainment of grace.  As you rightly noted, Calvin said one could not “know” whether they were saved or not.  The New Lights still believed in election via predestination, but they rejected the notion that it was unknowable. Here is what I meant by reconciling Calvinism.  In simple terms, the colonists said keep predestination, but added the caveat that salvation can be known by a visible New Birth as witnessed in the great revivals.  The outward show of emotions they equated as being signs of the New Birth. 

    September 11, 2008 at 7:58 pm #10718 Reply
    Phidippides
    Keymaster

    Ok, that makes sense.  Thanks for the explanation.Along the same lines, another question: were Anabaptist colonists (e.g. Quakers, etc.) involved in the Great Awakening as well, or was it more just a phenomena of Calvinist-rooted denominations?

    September 13, 2008 at 1:54 pm #10719 Reply
    DonaldBaker
    Participant

    The Moravians led by Count Zizendorf flourished during this time in the Southern Colonies, but whether or not they were participants in the Great Revival of Religion in the manner of the New Lights and New Sides is not clear to me at this time.  Will have to do some more research on that.

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