The Second Great Awakening Tehsa Grafals. The Second great awakening was a period of great religious revival that continued into the antebellum period.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Reforming American Society
Advertisements

Religious Awakening Chapter 4, Section 1.
Pgs The Second Great Awakening The 18 th Century belief that God determined one’s salvation or damnation was thrown out. Emphasis on individual.
Religion Sparks Reform Slavery & Abolition Women &
Religion Sparks Reform
Religion Spark Reform Chapter 8-1.  US religious movement after 1790  Rejected 18 th century belief that God predetermined if a person would go to heaven.
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.
The second Great Awakening By: Marie Lopez. An Era of Religious Renewal During the early 1800’s a powerful religious movement was going about in the backcountry.
Cultural, Social and Religious Life
Social & Religious Life Chapter #7:iii [Image source: America - Pathways to the Present, page 222.]
The Cold War BeginsA Religious Awakening Section 1 Describe the Second Great Awakening. Explain why some religious groups suffered from discrimination.
THE SECOND GREAT AWAKENING: ( –Rapid social changes transformed the United States at the beginning of the 1800s –In response, many Americans turned.
Second Great Awakening
American History 9 Mr. Feeney Henry David Thoreau Ralph Waldo Emerson.
Reforming American Society
Reforming American Society
The Second Great Awakening
THE SECOND GREAT AWAKENING By: Alexa, Mary, Grace and Nicole.
’s The Second Great Awakening Period of Religious revival following the American Revolution. Mainly started in the Northeast and Midwest. “Camp.
Bell Ringer What elements of society today do you think should change?
Religion and Reform Sto Mahoney Tom Jackoboice 11/11/10 A.P. U.S. History.
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.
Second Great Awakening. 2 nd Great Awakening What is the 2 nd Great Awakening? – It is a religious movement that occurs in the ’s, where people.
Textile mill in Reforming American Society A religious revival sparks reform movements, including calls to outlaw slavery. Factory laborers begin.
Religion Sparks Reform
Revivalism Will Hancock and Alex Story. Sources of Revivalism Revivalism was a movement born out of the Second Great Awakening. Thus, it was sparked by.
 Deism: Relied on reason rather than revelation, science rather than the Bible Believed in God  Unitarians God only existed in 1 person; Jesus is not.
 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.
Aim #27: What was the Second Great Awakening? Do now! PUT ANSWERS ON SEPARATE SHEET OF PAPER!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Rows 1 and 2 (closest to door): read.
Reforming American Society What changes occurred in 1800s America?
A Religious Awakening 8.1.
Religious & Women’s Reform Chapter 15. Religious Reform The Second Great Awakening: religious movement that swept America in the early 1800’s The Second.
Religion Sparks Reform An effort to improve life in America during the mid-1800s.
19 th Century Reform Movements. Kindred Spirits by Asher Durand Cole and Durand often included a broken stump in their paintings. What do you think it.
By: Jordan, Stephanie, and D.J.
TEKS 8C: Calculate percent composition and empirical and molecular formulas. Religion and Thought Before the Civil War.
The Second Great Awakening. Rejected Calvistic ideas that God determined who was damned and who was saved Rejected Calvistic ideas that God determined.
Religious Reforms. Second Great Awakening New religious fervor swept through US in 1830s –Concentrated in upstate NY.
The Democratization of American Religion Chapter 7.4 U.S. History.
CH 8 Sections1 New Religions and Ideas.. The Second Great Awakening was a religious movement that swept across the United States after It relied.
Great Awakening = Religious Revival “one cannot be awakened unless you have fallen asleep” Why do the colonies need a religious revival?
What were the causes and effects of the Second Great Awakening and the various reform movements that swept the nation in the first half of the 19 th century?
RELIGION AND REFORM IN THE EARLY 19 TH CENTURY JACKSONIAN REFORM MOVEMENTS.
Reforms in 19 th Century America. The Second Great Awakening 1.Was a broad religious movement that swept the US after The preachers of this period.
Chapter 8, Section 1.
Chapter: 8 Section: 1 Religion Sparks Reform
Religious/Philosophical Reform in the early 1800’s
Religious Awakening Chapter 4, Section 1.
Religion Sparks Reform
Transcendentalism Hippies of the 1800s.
Religion and Reform
Religion Sparks Reform
The Second Great Awakening
The Second Great Awakening
Reforming American Society
2nd Great Awakening Revival of religious feeling in the early 1800’s
Religion and Reform
Religious Awakening Chapter 4, Section 1.
Religion and Thought Before the Civil War
WARM UP – APRIL 21 New Seating Chart - Everyone find your name
Reform Movements.
Religion and Reform
Religion and Thought Before the Civil War
“The Pursuit of Perfection”
Reforming American Society
Religion Reform
Presentation transcript:

The Second Great Awakening Tehsa Grafals

The Second great awakening was a period of great religious revival that continued into the antebellum period of the U.S. It was the beginning of many conversions to the Christian Evangelism religion Because of Evangelism prison reform, abolitionism, and temperance changed.

Revivalist meetings, known as “Camp Meetings”, were held in little towns and great cities. 1801, The most famous Camp Meeting was held at Cane Ridge, Kentucky and was led by Barton W. Stone who before was a Presbyterian minister. This Camp Meeting lasted a week with over 23,000 people attending and people stating that they sensed God’s presence.

In New York, Restorationism was very encouraged and other different spiritual movements, above all the Mormons and Holiness Movement. 1821, Charles G. Finney made a religious speech about Christianity and how if people made the right choices they would find salvation.

The Unitarian Movement Disparaging the revivals for their communal emotionalism, the Unitarian Movement shared with revivalism a reliance in ones self. Instead of satisfying emotions Unitarians emphasized reason and your conscience which to them was the path to perfection. Unitarians attracted the wealthy and educated in New England.

The African American Church In this Church the enslaved African Americans did everything in their church that their slave owners did. The only difference was the message they believed they were receiving at church which was a promise for freedom for their people.

Transcendentalism Ralph Waldo Emerson developed a belief in transcendentalism which is a philosophical and literary movement which emphasized living a straightforward life and celebrated the truth found in nature and in your emotions and imagination.

Woman’s Christian Temperance Union The Woman’s Christian Temperance Union and the Anti-Saloon League rapidly became active. As their political power grew, they changed from moral influence to making the government to control liquor. In fact, they succeeded in getting many liquor laws passed with help from churches and factories who saw poor efficiency from drunken workers. Some eminent figures are Susan B Anthony, Frances E. Willard, and Carry Nation.

In the South Western Regions like Kentucky and Tennessee, the revival mainly supported the growth of Methodists and Baptists. Many planters and slaves joined these congregations.

Women also played an important role in the revivalist movement and organizations that benefitted from that were the YMCA( Young Man’s Christian Association).

October 22, 1844 was the date the second advent of Jesus Christ was supposedly supposed to occur. This was predicted by William Miller. Christ’s failure to appear was known as the Great Disappointment.

Effects of the Second Great Awakening It increased concern over slavery, which eventually led to the Civil War which ended it. Government regulation, instruction on alcoholism in schools, study of alcoholism.

Reference