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Author Lovejoy, David S. (David Sherman), 1919-

Title Religious enthusiasm and the Great Awakening / David S. Lovejoy.

Imprint Englewood Cliffs, N.J. : Prentice-Hall, ©1969.

Copies

Location Call No. OPAC Message Status
 Axe Kansas Collection J Schick  277.3 L942r 1969    ---  Lib Use Only
Description ix, 115 pages ; 22 cm.
text txt rdacontent
unmediated n rdamedia
volume nc rdacarrier
Series American historical sources series: research and interpretation
American historical sources series. Research and interpretation.
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references (pages 113-115).
Summary "Examines the causes and results of a great revival which attacked Old World traditions as out of place in eighteenth-century America. According to the revivalists, if the New World were to fulfill its promise as a land where God worked intimately with a chosen people, then stifling, time-worn practices must be reshaped into appropriate instruments for a vital, experimental religion. Eighteenth-century Americans were well aware of religious enthusiasm by the time of the Great Awakening in the 1740s. The churches, based on Old World institutions and customs, had played a central role in their colonial life. The proponents of the Awakening provoked a debate which not only had far-reaching effects but split most American colonists into two camps over its fundamental issue. Was the Revival a genuine outpouring of the spirit of God or was it rather a first-rate example of hot-headed enthusiasm traditionally considered false and presumptuous? Advocates of the Awakening were impatient with the confines of theology and church discipline and sought a more direct, intense, and personal relationship with God. Its leaders recognized the increasing influence of Enlightenment thought and the serious decline in religious practice in the Colonies. They urged a more active, personal, and emotional part in the spread of God's grace and warned of the consequences if religious complacency and disinterest continued to increase. In describing the sharp contention that took place during the Great Awakening and after, Professor Lovejoy has explored a major conflict in early American history whose legacy endures today. To many, the Awakening posed a threat to both religion and to the political and social stability of American society. Was the Great Awakening a burst of enthusiasm to be exposed and condemned as evil, or was it the beginning of a new religious spirit and technique that the New World experience demanded?"--Jacket.
Contents The grand itinerant / George Whitefield -- A thousand people hang on his words / Sarah Pierrepont Edwards -- Benjamin Franklin describes George Whitefield / Benjamin Franklin -- What shall we do to be saved? / Thomas Prince -- The terror of the law / Jonathan Edwards -- The conversion of Isaac Backus and his call to the ministry / Isaac Backus -- The danger of an unconverted ministry / Gilbert Tennent -- The Awakening reaches backcountry Virginia / Patrick Henry Sr. -- New England and the French prophets / Anonymous -- Every idle untruth as a revelation / Charles Brockwell -- The Great Fire of New London / Dr. Alexander Hamilton -- Be it enacted ... that if any minister ... any person whosoever ... / Connecticut Assembly -- The heat and fervor of their passions / Charles Chauncy -- A thousand imprudences will not prove a work to be not of the spirit of God / Jonathan Edwards -- A dislike of doctrines not savouring of experimental piety / Samuel Davies -- Is it a crime for a believer to speak of his having communications directly from the spirit of God? / George Whitefield -- My soul is grieved for such enthusiastical fooleries / Gilbert Tennent -- If this be enthusiasm, make the most of it / Jonathan Edwards.
Subject Great Awakening.
Great Awakening. (OCoLC)fst00947009
Great Awakening.
ISBN 0137732759
9780137732753

 
    
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