The Second Great Awakening

Religion in America

1790s: Is religion dead?

   French Revolution: Festival of Reason, 1793

   New England ministers worry

      Tom Paine’s Age of Reason

      Victory of rationalism?

   Revivalism quiet in the South

      Migration from Piedmont to the West

   Jefferson’s victory in 1800: official atheism?

Revivalism returns

   Revivals in Connecticut & at Yale, late 1790s, to counter Age of Reason

   Presbyterians on the frontier

Camp Meetings

   Cane Ridge, 1801: “America’s Pentecost”

      Organized by Barton Stone

      First large camp-meeting

       Perhaps 20,000 attend

The Methodists

   John Wesley (1703-1791)

      Ordained Anglican priest, 1728

      Joins “Methodist” study group, 1729

      SPG mission to Georgia, 1735-37

      Aldersgate (Moravian) Chapel experience, 1738

      Organizes “classes” & circuit preachers

   Charles Wesley and hymns

      Following Isaac Watts’s lead

Growth of Methodism

   Francis Asbury

      First bishop, 1785

   Success of the circuit rider

   Methodist meetings

      Emotional

      Dreams and visions

      Miraculous healings

      Speaking in tongues

Methodist Camp-Meeting Plan, 1809

Methodist Camp-Meeting, 1819

Methodist Camp-Meeting, 1839

Camp Meetings

   Methodists embrace camp-meetings

      Lorenzo Dow and the “jerking exercise”

      Peter Cartwright

   Presbyterians recoil from Cane Ridge

   Baptists grow reluctant

African Americans & Revival

   Attraction to emotional spirituality

   African elements

      Ring shouts

      Spirituals

   Methodism’s antislavery principles

      “Thoughts upon Slavery,” 1744

   African Methodist Episcopal Church

      Richard Allen, 1816

   Baptist churches in the South