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The Second Great Awakening: Finney, Moody, and. The Rise of Mormonism ... With the post-revolutionary war economic boom the USA spread west ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Add me


1
Add me
  • Moody description in Ordained of the Lord H.A.
    Ironside, pp. 32-35

2
Age of Progress II
  • The Second Great Awakening Finney, Moody, and
  • The Rise of Mormonism

3
Early 19th Century Churches
  • With the post-revolutionary war economic boom the
    USA spread west
  • Along with the frontiersmen went Christians,
    missionaries, and churches.
  • People exercised their right to religious freedom
  • The lack of a state church continued to increase
    the number of unchurched
  • Inter-denominational struggles caused strife
    especially in rural areas

4
Early 19th Century Churches
  • Along with the economic boom came a massive
    increase in immigration
  • Roman Catholic numbers swelled along with the
    immigrants, especially among the German and Irish
  • The frontier/rural areas tended towards
    mainstream protestant denominations and the urban
    areas towards Catholicism
  • Interdenominational movements like the American
    Bible Society, American Tract Society, and the
    American Sunday School Union rose to meet the
    growing needs

5
Early 19th Century Churches
  • Christianity gained some state support due to its
    founding of social apparatus like schools,
    universities, orphanages, etc.
  • Crazy utopian communities like the Oneida
    community emerged

6
Charles Finney
  • Born Aug. 29, 1792 in Warren, CT
  • At 2 his family moved to NY along with many other
    emigrants, they were poor farmers and lived in
    harsh conditions
  • He heard very little preaching growing up and
    what he did was grammatically poor
  • Didnt go to college but got a high school
    education and then a Law certification
  • Moved to Adams, NY and led the church choir
    though still an outspoken unbeliever

7
Charles Finney
  • Finney had a vision of Christ in the middle of
    the street and began to convert
  • After a day long process Finney knew he was saved
  • He realized that he now was to preach
  • Began an education that was more argument than
    learning
  • Was ordained as a Presbyterian minister, but
    later became Congregationalist

8
Charles Finney
  • Finney was Semi-Armenian and specifically
    anti-Hypercalvinist due to Unitarianisms origins
    in calvinistic thought
  • He led a massive reform in the methodology of
    revival
  • Preached extemporaneously, used encouragers,
    prayed for people by name from the pulpit, had
    women praying at the front of the church,
    endorsed mixed gender prayer services, and
    ostensibly created the modern altar call with his
    anxious bench

9
Charles Finney
  • Preached massive revivals with claims of over
    500,000 getting saved
  • Western New York became the Burned-Over
    District because there was no fuel left for
    revival there
  • The mass conversions werent all absorbed by
    local churches and some fell by the wayside once
    emotion was gone
  • Was a staunch abolitionist
  • Was to some degree involved in the perfectionist
    theology of his day

10
Charles Finney
  • Became professor and eventually president of
    Oberlin college, the first college to allow women
    and black people to study in classes with white
    males
  • Finney died in 1875
  • His Christianity and the effects of his ministry
    are still to this day hotly debated
  • To many Reformed Christians Finney is an
    arch-heretic and the doom of evangelism
  • To many modern Evangelicals Finney is a great
    hero and model for revival

11
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12
D.L. Moody
  • Born Feb. 5 1837 6th of 9 children
  • His father died when he was 4 and his mother had
    great difficulty keeping the family together
  • A local Unitarian pastor came alongside the
    family and helped care for them both spiritually
    and materially
  • The Moody family became Christian
  • At 17 he traveled to Boston, and after a period
    of hopeless job hunting got a job as a shoe
    salesman in his uncles store

13
D.L. Moody
  • He was mostly illiterate, but an excellent shoe
    salesman
  • Moody converted after a visit from his Sunday
    school teacher
  • After some scufuffle he was given membership in
    the church
  • Following his impetuous nature Moody moved to
    Chicago on a whim
  • He made a good deal of money as a salesman as
    well as increasing his involvement in various
    works for God

14
D.L. Moody
  • His love for evangelism manifested itself, he
    rented a pew and filled it weekly with various
    bums and wastrels
  • Began a Sunday school ministry among the children
    of the slums earning him the nickname Crazy
    Moody
  • At 24 Moody submitted to his call to full time
    ministry having lost all desire to work
  • Became very involved in the Y.M.C.A
  • During the Civil war Moody initiated tent camp
    evangelism converting many soldiers

15
D.L. Moody
  • 1867 traveled to England and met his two heroes
    Charles Spurgeon and George Müller
  • A massive fire burned down Moodys school and
    YMCA building in Chicago
  • He traveled to New York in order to raise funds
    for rebuilding
  • While in New York his soul was tormented until he
    had a revelation and anointing
  • Traveled to England in order to refresh and
    increase in learning

16
D.L. Moody
  • In answer to a crippled girls prayers Moody
    preached in a church that saw a massive revival
    of over 400 new members
  • Thus began his career of mass evangelism
  • Teaming up with Ira Sankey Moody traveled all
    over preaching revival wherever he went
  • He founded several schools including the still
    famous Moody Bible Institute
  • It is said that in his lifetime he preached to
    over 1,000,000 people.

17
D.L. Moody
  • He grew old became ill with a heart condition
  • Hiding the condition he preached one more series
    of sermons in Kentucky
  • He then went home to die
  • He died

18
2nd Great Awakening
  • Massive 19th Century revival that swept across
    America
  • It began with the Kentucky Revival in the early
    1800s and continued on in various aspects
    throughout the rest of the century.
  • In the frontiers the Baptists and Methodist
    denominations grew quickly as they were the
    primary movers in revival
  • More urban revivals such as took place in New
    England under Finney and Chicago under Moody were
    less denominational

19
2nd Great Awakening
  • The entire awakening was marked by radicalism
  • Especially in the frontiers people were excitable
    and prone to hysterics
  • Also gave rise to several modern day heretical
    movements like Mormons and Jehovahs Witnesses
  • Provided a platform for social change often
    promoting such ideas as race equality and
    prohibition
  • Many many many were saved or at least claimed to
    be

20
Joseph Smith Jr.
  • Born in Virginia to a down on their luck family
    who moved around looking for work
  • Moved to New York along with many other families,
    eventually giving up on hard work and seeking
    less difficult means of employment
  • Joseph was marked as a clever boy with a knack
    for storytelling, but was never well educated
  • Supposedly at 14 he had a theophany of God the
    Father and Jesus

21
Joseph Smith Jr.
  • He began spreading his tale with some success,
    though when he began telling about it meets with
    mixed reports
  • Functioned as an exhorter during the 1824 revival
    that took place in Palmyra
  • Was almost baptized in the Baptist church in
    order to marry Emma Hale
  • 1827 the location of golden plates containing the
    real testament of Jesus Christ was revealed to
    him by the angel Moroni, along with a
    restorationist command for the church

22
Joseph Smith Jr.
  • He translated the plates by dictating to a scribe
    as he translated
  • Thus was the book of Mormon written
  • A good looking a charismatic man he eventually
    gained many followers
  • 1831 to avoid conflict in New York the Smiths
    moved to Kirtland Ohio where they built the first
    Mormon temple
  • 1838 they fled to Missouri due to local unrest
    and mob violence primarily due to Smiths
    polygamous practices

23
Joseph Smith Jr.
  • Moved to Independence Missouri and had visions
    that it was to be the center of Zion in Christs
    soon to come millennium
  • Political blocs, physical violence, and a take
    over attempt made the Mormons unpopular in
    Missouri
  • Smith was imprisoned for several months but
    bribed his way out with liquor and
  • 1839 moved to Nauvoo Illinois where the Mormons
    became dominant and Smith became mayor

24
Joseph Smith Jr.
  • 1842 Smith became a freemason
  • 1844 announced his candidacy for president of the
    USA
  • The newly made newspaper the Nauvoo Expositor
    complained against Smith and his Polygamy
  • Smith ordered the paper destroyed and shut down
    violating freedom of the press
  • Popular opinion rose against Smith and he was
    imprisoned in Carthage jail

25
Joseph Smith Jr.
  • While in jail with his brother and a few
    followers a mob came and attacked them
  • Both Joseph and Hyrum Smith were killed, Joseph
    tried to escape by jumping from the window and
    was shot
  • His last words were Oh, Lord, my God, the
    beginning of a Masonic cry for help
  • Smiths death left a succession crises from which
    the church split, though the mainstream Mormons
    followed Brigham Young to Utah where they remain
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