Unit 4.6 Second Great Awakening Notes
I. Second Great Awakening (1797 – 1859)
The Second Great Awakening began among frontier farmers of ______
Spread quickly among Methodists, Baptists, and Presbyterians
Central ideas: Christians have a ______duty to improve the world in which they live; entrance to Heaven is gained through acts of ______
Tent Revivals
During the Awakening, traveling ministers would set up ______and preach, often for up to a week at a time
Singing, prayers, motivational sermons, and speaking in ______were all designed to whip up the crowd into emotional protestations of faith
______ (1792 – 1875): Revivalist Presbyterian minister
Allowed women to participate in public ______(not a normal practice at the time)
Preached that everyone has the ability to gain salvation through repentance and good works that demonstrate faith in God
Planned and rehearsed his revival sermons
Lyman Beecher (1775 – 1863): Revivalist Presbyterian minister
Father of author Harriet Beecher Stowe (Uncle Tom’s Cabin)
Preached that ______, not government, have to be responsible for building a better society
Strongly ______(anti-immigrant) and anti-Catholic
II. Benevolent societies
Developed in larger towns and cities in response to the revivalism of the Second Great Awakening
Main goal was to spread Protestant Christianity, but soon began to focus on social issues such as ______, prison reform, education reform, and ______
Surprisingly, many of these societies were led by ______
“True Womanhood” (Also called “The Cult of Domesticity”)
Belief at the time was that a woman’s responsibility was to be a ______and a model of Christian piety and virtue to their children and husband
This implied that wives were their husbands’ social equals and their moral superiors
Women interpreted this to mean that they had the responsibility to build a moral society in which to raise their families, so they assumed a role of social activism
Revivalism and abolition
Most revivalist ministers were staunch supporters of the abolitionist (______) movement
They taught that slavery was ______because it destroys the soul of the master and the body of the slave
III. New American Religious Groups
The Unitarian Church
Believe Jesus was not the Son of God, but was an important teacher – there was no Virgin Birth, no miracles, and no Resurrection
God is a unity (God is ______), not a Trinity (Father, Son, Holy Spirit)
The Universalist Church
Believe in Universal ______– there is no Hell and God redeems everyone because He loves everyone
God would not create a person knowing that they were ______to eternal damnation
The Mormon Church
The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints
Started in New York, but were the victims of harassment and persecution over their unique religious beliefs, including the addition of a third testament to the Bible (The ______) and practice of ______(having multiple wives)
After leaving New York, the group eventually resettled in Illinois
Joseph Smith (1805 – 1844)
Founder of ______and recorder of The Book of Mormon – which he claimed to have received from an angel – which describes how the Israelites arrived in America around 600 BC and were later visited by Jesus
Had numerous legal problems in Missouri and Illinois which eventually led to his arrest
Murdered by an anti-Mormon mob in 1844 while awaiting trial
______ (1801 – 1877): President of the Mormon church from 1847 -1877
After Smith’s death, he led the Mormons west to the remote Utah Territory to escape persecution, founding Salt Lake City, which remains the unofficial “______” of the Church today
Had 55 wives, but most were widows he married in order to become financially responsible for them and their children
IV. Utopian Communities
Attempts to establish social equality by building communities where all work, responsibilities and rewards are shared ______by the citizens
New Harmony, Indiana
Town which was bought in 1824 by a utopian group with the intention of transforming it into a perfect socialist community
No private property, no money were allowed; the community failed and was dissolved in 1829
Oneida Community, NY
Founded by John Noyes in 1848 in Oneida, NY; lasted until 1881
All members of the community worked in a factory making ______(Oneida Flatware)
Every man was married to every woman in the community (a practice called complex marriage)
Older women introduced young men to sex, while older men did the same for young women
Efforts were made to breed more perfect children by careful selection of breeding partners; children were then raised by the community rather than by specific parents
Brook Farm Community
Founded in 1841, near west Roxbury, MA
Community of Transcendentalist philosophers
Citizens shared all labor, and used their free time for ______discussion
Community collapsed economically after being destroyed by fire in 1847
Shakers: The United Society of Believers in Christ’s Second Appearing
Founded by Ann Lee (who Shakers believed to be the Second Appearing of Christ) in England; offshoot of the Quakers
No marriage allowed, lifelong celibacy required
Shakers would adopt orphans to keep communities alive
All work and living quarters were divided by sex, but the sexes were equals
Peaked in mid 1800s with about 6000 members, today only 3 known practitioners in the US