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History of the Church II: Week 14
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The Destiny of a Nation To better understand the modern day America church, we have to look at how Christianity developed in our history. In 1835 when Lyman Beecher preached a sermon from Isaiah 66:8 he called it A Plea for the West. Beecher believed firmly that a vast new country was going to be developed from the wilderness. Christians needed to shape the culture by preaching the gospel, distributing Bibles, planting churches, building schools and reforming morals.
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The Destiny of a Nation The drive to the west was the major theme of American history until the closing of the frontier in 1890. After the Revolutionary War so many people moved west that by 1821 half of all people in the country lived west of the Appalachian Mountains. Christianity was at an all-time low during this time period with less than 10% of the population attending church. Frontier life was hard, rough, immoral and shocking to Europeans who traveled there.
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The Destiny of a Nation Two factors that helped Christianity tame the west: volunteer societies and revivals. As Carey used the societies for missionary work in India, Americans had their missionary field in the west. These societies helped in three ways: exert influence on public opinion, provide support for missionaries in the west and spread reform ideals in the youthful nation. All kinds of societies were formed to help evangelize the west.
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The Destiny of a Nation The revival which started the Second Great Awakening was in Cane Ridge, Kentucky in 1801. Rev. Barton Warren Stone had wanted to get a large gathering together but never expected what happened on that August day. Col. Robert Patterson, in a letter to a friend, said the meetings started on a rainy Friday with about 10,000 people. The preaching went on the first time non-stop from Friday until the following Wednesday. People were confessing, fainting, the preaching was loud and souls saved.
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The Destiny of a Nation The meeting lasted for two full weeks although some locals remained for two months. The Cane Ridge Revival was an example of the types of meetings that occurred during the Second Great Awakening until about the 1840’s. As with the First Great Awakening, different regions produced different types of experiences. Out west, the revivals tended to be loud, boisterous, long and exhibit more of the “gifts” like speaking in tongues, visions and prophesies. The pastors were less educated sometimes not educated at all.
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The Destiny of a Nation In the east, they were less rowdy and more focused on social issues like abolition of slavery and temperance. An example of using revival to affect social change were preachers like Charles Finney. Finney style of preaching almost always included some sort of commentary on slavery. He wrote several books on the topic and one of the books influenced Beecher’s daughter Harriet to write Uncle Tom’s Cabin.
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The Destiny of a Nation As the Second Great Awakening faded, Christianity again found itself at a crossroads. How could churches from the both the North and the South use the Bible to justify their cause? During this time in America history more cults were formed than at any other time including the Mormons, Jehovah Witness and Unitarianism. To top in all off, European ideas were flooding American universities. Ideas like evolution, Marxism and Social Darwinism. How would the Church respond?
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