Jordyn Fields, Katherine Martinez, Kathryn Baker, Robbie Mcgovern, & James Arndt.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Important Terms I Important Terms II Important.
Advertisements

The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints By: Nick Rapier, Grayson Hineline, and Parth Parab.
The Great Awakening In Colonial America. In Review  Colonial America was in transition.  The communities had been established and were thriving.  Immigration.
Chapter 24 Pietism and revivalism. Questions to be addressed in this chapter 1.What theological development in seventeenth century German Lutheranism.
A Religious Awakening.
2 nd Great Awakening Objective 2.05/2.06. Causes  Church attendance was greatly weakening  Growth of scientific knowledge and rationalism  Began in.
Religious Experiments Look to the Past and the Future.
By: Let-thee. What is the Mormon trail? The Mormon trail is a 1,300 mile route. Members of The church for Jesus Christ of Latter day saints traveled from.
New Settlers in California and Utah
Mormon By: Samantha Krebs and Jayde Jenkins. History Mormonism was founded in 1830, in Fayette, New York Founded by Joseph Smith Mormons are Christians,
The 2 nd Great Awakening (1790s- Early 1800s). Charles Finney Charles Finney conducted his own revivals in the mid 1820s and early 1830s He rejected the.
Latter Day Saints By: Maria Macchia and Shinead MacFarlane.
Cultural, Social and Religious Life
Mormonism By: Katherine Esteve, Emily Wright, Lucy Yuan, and Kathy Guo.
LDS. History  Joseph Smith  From New Hampshire  Visited by Heavenly Father and his son JC at age 14  Couple years later was led to golden plates by.
The Church of Jesus Christ and the Latter day Saints What is the Mormon Church?
Chapter 7 Section 3 Social and Religious Life. Social Changes Mobile Society- where people are moving from place to place -not just from one place to.
The Cold War BeginsA Religious Awakening Section 1 Describe the Second Great Awakening. Explain why some religious groups suffered from discrimination.
New World and American Zion
THE SECOND GREAT AWAKENING: ( –Rapid social changes transformed the United States at the beginning of the 1800s –In response, many Americans turned.
The Mormon Migration. A Religious Journey  Mormon was a nickname given to those people who gathered around Joseph Smith. The actual name of the church.
Section 2-A Changing Culture Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information. Chapter Objectives Section 2: A Changing Culture.
The Second Great Awakening
THE GREAT AWAKENING A Religious Revival Changes the Hearts and Minds Of the American Colonists.
Mormon-a person that is connected by church membership or heritage to the religious and cultural tradition that is known as Mormonism Mormonism began.
Evangelical America Revivals and the Changing Face of American Christianity.
The American Pageant: Chapter 15. Religion under the Founding Fathers Before the reform and revival, 3/4ths of Americans attended church in During.
SAT History Cultural Trends to Religion Since the Revolution, America became more secular (less religious) This was due to educated Americans agreeing.
The Great Awakening Chapter 5, Section 4.
The Second Great Awakening and Utopian Societies
New Religious Movements Or Cults and Sects. Sects  A sect:  demands greater conformity of its members than a church  is exclusive in membership  distances.
MORMONS TRAVEL WEST. Members of Joseph Smith’s church or the Church of Jesus Christ of Later-day Saints WHO ARE THE MORMONS?
 A new religious revival characterized by emotional camp meetings  An evangelical movement which stressed preaching and emphasized the idea of salvation.
Religious Awakening CHAPTER 4, SECTION 1. Second Great Awakening  The revival of religious feeling in the U.S. during the 1800s was known as the Second.
Chapter 6 Section 2. New Wave of Immigrants  Between , over 5 million immigrants arrived in U.S.  Many from Ireland who were fleeing famine.
Religious Revivalism and Utopian Idealism. Second Great Awakening 1797 – – 1859 The Second Great Awakening began among frontier farmers of Kentucky.
Second Great Awakening By: Guadalupe Cruz, Chris Arbo, Daryl Davis, and Shae Brockington.
By: Jordan, Stephanie, and D.J.
The Second Great Awakening Tehsa Grafals. The Second great awakening was a period of great religious revival that continued into the antebellum period.
TEKS 8C: Calculate percent composition and empirical and molecular formulas. Religion and Thought Before the Civil War.
The 2 nd Great Awakening (1790s- Early 1800s). Charles Finney Charles Finney conducted his own revivals in the mid 1820s and early 1830s He rejected the.
Chapter 7 Section 1 New way of life- America Bald eagle- symbol- freedom, independence, raw energy.
The Democratization of American Religion Chapter 7.4 U.S. History.
Religion and Thought Before the Civil War Chapter 8 Section 1.
The Second Great Awakening: The Inspiration for Reform.
Mormons A brief history about how the LDS Church started.
Protestant Reformation Development of Christian Denominations.
Passing through the great basin
Miners, mountain men and Mormons! Oh my!
3 Trails Heading West. 3 Trails Heading West The Oregon Trail Independence, Missouri to The Oregon Territory 2,000 miles of trail.
Religion in the United States Standard The Great Awakenings First Second Third Fourth
Mormons & The Church of the Latter Day Saints Joseph Smith and the Second Great Awakening.
By: Megan Moreland and Maggie Zangara
Bell Work Complete your weekly calendars..
Antebellum Reforms.
Mormonism Mr. C Productions.
Awakening influence the Age
Bellringer: 11/22/16 Why might people want to come and live in Utah, rather than California or Oregon?
The 1st Great Awakening (1730s -1740s)
Religion in Early America
The Ferment of Reform and Culture
Copy the following on PORTFOLIO p. 3.
Second Great Awakening
2nd Great Awakening Revival of religious feeling in the early 1800’s
Religion and Reform
Religion and Thought Before the Civil War
Religion and Thought Before the Civil War
CH. 11 STUDENT NOTES. CH. 11 STUDENT NOTES ANTEBELLUM AMERICA (PERIOD OF TIME BEFORE THE CIVIL WAR) Defined by several factors: Increased industrialization.
By Micah Rodriguez.
Religion Reform
Presentation transcript:

Jordyn Fields, Katherine Martinez, Kathryn Baker, Robbie Mcgovern, & James Arndt

Second Great Awakening Definition- It was a religious revival movement during the early 19th century in the United States. The movement began around 1790, gained momentum by 1800 and, after 1820, membership rose rapidly among Baptist and Methodist congregations whose preachers led the movement.

Perfectionism Definition- A doctrine holding that religious, moral, social, or political perfection is attainable, especially the theory that human moral or spiritual perfection should be or has been attained.

Unitarian,Baptist and Methodist Definitions: Unitarian-a person, especially a Christian, who asserts the unity of God and rejects the doctrine of the Trinity. Baptist-a member of a Protestant Christian denomination advocating baptism only of adult believers by total immersion. Baptists form one of the largest Protestant bodies and are found throughout the world and especially in the US. Methodist-a member of a Christian Protestant denomination originating in the 18th-century evangelistic movement of Charles and John Wesley and George Whitefield.

Joseph Smith Definition- -Founder of Mormonism and Church of Latter Day Saints. -At 24, he published the Book of Mormon. Smith claimed to have had religious visions about Jesus, God and an angel named Moroni. -The angel guided him to a buried book of golden plates. Smith then translated them into english in the Book of Mormon. -Gained thousands of followers. -Regarded as a prophet.

Mormons and Polygamy Definition- Mormons: The church was founded by a guy named Joseph Smith in 1830 in Salt Lake City, Utah. This religious group emphasized moderation, saving, hard work, and risk-taking. Their religious beliefs challenged churches’ conceptions of theology. They also challenged democratic trends. Because of these claims and unusual practices such as polygamy, Mormons were shunned. Morons settled in the state of Utah to escape persecution. Polygamy: The practice of marriage by a man to multiple wives. Between 1840 and 1890 in the United States, polygamy was customary among some African peoples and was practiced by many Mormons.

Church of Latter- Day Saints Definition- Church of Latter- Day Saints: -They were also known as the Mormon church. -They were a group that believed in the Book of Mormon. - Joseph Smith organized the mormons after receiving "Sacred writings" in New York. They were very unpopular because of their practice of polygamy.

Brigham Young Definition- -Originally a methodist, but converted to mormonism after he read the Book of Mormon in the early 1830s. -He was a leader in the Latter Day Saint movement and settler of the west. -He was the president of the Church of Jesus Christ and Latter-Day Saints. -Regarded as “American Moses” because he led followers in an exodus through the desert in the Western United Sates to what they saw as the promised land. -He influenced the development of American Western/Mormon culture.

Brigham Young and the New Zion Definition- -Mormon religious community in Salt Lake City, Utah. -After Smith died, Mormons followed Young here to escape religious persecution in New England. -Unified society of Latter-Day Saints. -Utah presently has the highest Mormon population in the United States.

Timothy Dwight Definition- -Wielded both the Temporal Sword (as the head of Connecticut’s Federalist party), and spiritual sword (as head of the Congregational church). -Helped to create the second “Great Awakening” out of fear that states would fail to establish schools and the rise of “infidelity” would destroy republican institutions.

Charles G. Finney Definition- -Most active during the middle 1800’s as a revivalists. -Known for his innovations in preaching and conduct of religious meetings. -Later in his life, he became known for his work during the abolitionist movement. -He frequently denied that slavery was necessary and didn’t want it to exist. -In 1835, he became a professor at Oberlin College in Ohio and after a decade was selected as its second president.

William Miller Definition- - Coming from a background in the military, William Miller decided to turn to preaching. -Throughout his time, he was deeply concerned with the subject of death and the afterlife. -He believed that after death, there are only two things that can happen: annihilation, and accountability. -Shortly after his return to his family home in Low Hampton, he took steps towards regaining his baptist faith. -His followers, Millerites or Adventists, followed his preachings of Millennialism.

Why join this movement? The world may be full of sinners, turmoil, and wrong-doings, but we can change that. If we learn to believe again, we can preserve the faith and feel revived and find a way to keep the world hopeful. People come to America to start a new life and there is no better way to do so than to join this movement!