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The Great Awakening - Documents on the Revival of Religion, 1740-1745 (Paperback, New edition)
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The Great Awakening - Documents on the Revival of Religion, 1740-1745 (Paperback, New edition)
Series: Published by the Omohundro Institute of Early American History and Culture and the University of North Carolina Press
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Most twentieth-century Americans fail to appreciate the power of
Christian conversion that characterized the eighteenth-century
revivals, especially the Great Awakening of the 1740s. The common
disdain in this secular age for impassioned religious emotion and
language is merely symptomatic of the shift in values that has
shunted revivals to the sidelines.
The very magnitude of the previous revivals is one indication of
their importance. Between 1740 and 1745 literally thousands were
converted. From New England to the southern colonies, people of all
ages and all ranks of society underwent the New Birth. Virtually
every New England congregation was touched. It is safe to say that
most of the colonists in the 1740s, if not converted themselves,
knew someone who was, or at least heard revival preaching.
The Awakening was a critical event in the intellectual and
ecclesiastical life of the colonies. The colonists' view of the
world placed much importance on conversion. Particularly, Calvinist
theology viewed the bestowal of divine grace as the most crucial
occurrence in human life. Besides assuring admission to God's
presence in the hereafter, divine grace prepared a person for a
fullness of life on earth. In the 1740s the colonists, in
overwhelming numbers, laid claim to the divine power which their
theology offered them. Many experienced the moral transformatoin as
promised. In the Awakening the clergy's pleas of half a century
came to dramatic fulfillment.
Not everyone agreed that God was working in the Awakening. Many
believed preachers to be demagogues, stirring up animal spirits.
The revival was looked on as an emotional orgy that needlessly
disturbed the churches and frustrated the true work of God. But
from 1740 to 1745 no other subject received more attention in books
and pamphlets.
Through the stirring rhetoric of the sermons, theological
treatises, and correspondence presented in this collection, readers
can vicariously participate in the ecstasy as well as in the rage
generated by America's first national revival.
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