Weve been talking about the founding of the american colonies, and were getting now into the 1700s. Today and this week i want to focus mostly on religion in the late colonial period and the coming of the great awakening in the 1730s and 40s. And i know this has been on you alls minds since you have a paper coming up. Were going to get to some background on religion in the colonial period and the leadup to the great awakening, some of the overview of what happens in the great awakening and, hopefully, thatll set you up better for your papers. You can see here on the screen we have an image of George Whitfield who is the most famous preacher of the great awakening preaching in london there in the 1730s, 1740s. He is the sensation of the age, but well talk more about him when we get there. First, i want to take a look at the background to whats happening in 18th Century America with regard to religion. Weve talked about some of this already before in class about the scope of religion and religious commitment across the colonies. If you look first at the southern colonies from maryland down to georgia, mostly what we have is a formal commitment to the church of england. And the church of england, of course, is the National Official church of england, of britain, and most of those colonies adopt what we would call a kind of formal establishment of the church of england. But the southern colonies overall are probably the least religious of all the colonial regions which, if you think about that for a second, youll see why thats a little weird. We think of the southed today as the bible belt, correctly. But in the colonial period, its different. In the colonial period, there is a kind of formal establishment at least of the church of england, but once you get out past the Colonial Cities, places like williamsburg, charleston and savannah, the rates of church going and commitment to the church of england is pretty limited. And part of the reason for that if you remember going back to the founding of jamestown these colonies are mostly being founded for business. And its a little difficult to set up churches in the back country where settlement is so scattered. And so People Living in the rural south in the early 1700s, i mean, they might have been christians, for sure. Im sure most of them would have considered themselves christians. If they were literate, they probably read the bible. Maybe they had family devotions. But many, many of them did not go to church because maybe the nearest church was 50 miles away. If thats the case, youre going on a wagon, youre not going to go to church, right . So the south and people in the north, in the northern colonies recognized that, it isnt just looking back as a historian. People in new england would talk about their worry for the south and its relative godlessness. There just werent that many people going to church there, and there werent enough churches, werent enough pastors. And so the south was really regarded as the least religious part of the colonies. The middle colonies and here were talking about new jersey, pennsylvania, new york, delaware is a real mix of different kinds of christian denominations. You have and theyre often connected to a particular ethnicity. So you have scottish presbyterians or scots irish presbyterians. You have dutch reform people. This is the group who founded new netherlands in the 1620s, the dutch reformed church. German lutherans. There are quakers, of course, weve seen that. Theres different baptist groups in the middle colonies. And so the middle colonies, i think its representative of the kind of diversity that you see in modern america. There was just a lot of different kinds of religious groups. A lot of kinds of ethnicities. Sometimes they dont get along with each other, theyre competing for adherence, but its kind of hard to tell the one single, linear story of the south and slavery, new england and puritanism. The middle colonies is more like that. And in new england when you get into the early 1700s, and youre talking about the 18th century, we mean the 1700s, new england sees the decline of puritanism. Remember, they had been founded in massachusetts, connecticut especially, these kind of colonies were founded as puritan colonies. And puritanism by the early 1700s is in decline. Now 70, 80 years past the time of the founding. And the Puritan Movement has started to fade away. Historians e debate about just how much puritanism is really declining. Some of this may just be taught because you know that pastors especially but lots of christians will talk about, oh, you know, our founders were much more committed than we are. I dont know if youve ever heard that in a Church Service or something. But, you know, it used to be so much better, but now weve fallen away. Thats a very common rhetorical movement you get in churches, and you started to see that in the puritan churches in the late 1600s, early 1700s, and it breeds a type of sermon, a characteristic type of new england sermon that you get in this period that historians call the jeremiahad. If you know your bible, thats from jeremiah who was a very gloomy kind of prophet. And he was the sort of prophet that said to israel youve fallen away from god, you need to straighten up or else judgment is coming. And that kind of sermon became very common in new england too starting in the, say, 1670s, 1680, early 1700s. The pastors would say youve fallen away from your first love, youve fallen away from that original mission of the founding puritan generation in the 1630s, and you need to turn around, turn back to god and renew your devotion to the lord. Now, how reflective this is of actual reality on the, i mean, had the people really turned away from god . Its sort of hard to know how to measure that. Hard, obviously, to judge peoples hearts. But there is some evidence that at least new england is becoming more diverse, not just exclusively puritan. You may remember that we talked about that in the 1690s england started requiring massachusetts to tolerate other kinds of protestants. Not just puritans, but now you have to tolerate quakers and baptists and other kinds of protestant groups. There are some intriguing pieces of evidence about rising at least access to sort of immorality and so forth. In the 1680s it looks like boston probably gets its first brothel. You know, the characteristic of Colonial Cities in london and so forth at the time. But puritan boston gets a brothel, a house of prostitution. This is horrifying to a lot of people. There occasionally are dancing classes in boston. So, you know, the puritans were not keen on dancing. Especially between unmarried couples. You know, so theres, there are actually some pieces of evidence that you can look at and say, well, maybe this is becoming a sort of more diverse, nonpuritan kind of society. You know, maybe there is something there to that jeremiahad kind of theme. Probably the most horrific episode for the pastors in new england in the late 1600s for sure is the salem witchcraft. And we read a document on this for today if you want to pull your book out and look at that. The salem witchcraft crisis is horrific for the leaders in new england, first and foremost for them because they see it as a great attack of satan on their society. The puritans believe that they had this very high calling from god, and is so they thought, well, of course. What would you expect, that satan is going to break out in these attacks against us. And thats how they saw what happened in 1692, is that satan had raised up a cohort of witches to come and attack their people and try to disrupt new england society. So thats how they, first and foremost, interpreted what was going on in salem. And so dozens of people start being accused of being witches. Probably if you remember system of the story even from maybe reading Something Like the crucible by Arthur Miller in that there was a group of mostly teenage girls who probably had gotten involved in at least some kind of white magic type of practice trying to tell the future and so forth, and then those girls started to have signs of what the puritans would have considered to be demonic attacks, demonic oppressions and having convulsions and being tormented. And they would say that it was this woman, that woman who was coming especially in the spirit realm to attack them spiritually and to physically harm them. And so ultimately, now, by the way, its mostly younger women accusing older women of being witches. So almost are all the accused are women. But almost all the accusers are women too, and so one interesting historical investigation that some historians have engaged in was this a kind of what you would call a misogynystic or womanhating kind of gender episode, a loathing of women especially these kind of older will who were, you know, difficult to deal with, maybe theyd gotten into altercations with their neighbors and so forth. And thats an interesting thesis. But one kind of problem with it is its almost always women, too, who are accusing. It would be a little more convenient if it was men accusing women as a misogynistic episode. But there are some men who get accused of being warlocks, and it ends up being hundreds of people who get accused across the region. Its not just in salem, but ultimately some very elite people are getting accused, and i think not coincidentally thats when the judges and other officials start thinking about closing the thing down because they can see that the accusations are starting to just go completely viral, haywire, and they say, wait a minute,s this is too many people, and they start to doubt some aspects of the trials. Now, everyone in salem, inland, i think approaching 100 of everybody, believes that witches exist. So even the critics of the trials are saying, well, now we know that witches exist, but there are problems that we have with the way that the trials are being run, okay . And well talk about why in a minute. But thats a really important aspect to understand. This is not, you know, the puritans who in their religious fervor believe in the existence of witches and standing outside of that you have these skeptics that say, you fools, dont you realize . No, everybody realizes or believes at the time that the supernatural is real and that at least in isolated cases that people can make a covenant with the devil in order to have malevolent spiritual power so to be able to cast spells on people and maybe to torment them in the spirit realm at least. Okay . So lets take a look at this document, and ill get you to give me sol comments about this. Some comments about this. On page 43 in your book, you see we have an indian woman. Now, its debateable exactly who she was, but she seems to have been maybe an indentured servant or slave in the household of one of the pastors whos involved. And when they say indian, we think it might mean native american, partly native american, but its more likely that shes probably from the caribbean. Okay . So you remember when columbus came from the indies. So sometimes when they said an indian, that meant somebody from the caribbean. So we dont know a whole lot about her other than these testimonies. But shes being interrogated, and they start off on page 44, and they say the judge says to her, what evil spirit have you familiarity with . And she says, none. Why do you hurt these children . I do not hurt them. Who is it then . The devil for all i know. And so on and so forth. Now, when you lead in like that in this trial, what does that tell you about the way that judicial proceedings went in the 1600s . [inaudible] what does that tell you . Its very face value. Theres no, like, evidence to back it up, its just straight up asking and seeing if it happened. Yeah. I mean, its very matter of fact. Including about the spiritual. I mean, theyre very willing to take testimony about what the devil is doing. What else does it tell you about judicial based on this case, that there isnt much of an innocence until proven guilty. They just believe that she is guilty, but they dont necessarily have the evidence to back the claim. But they do believe she is guilty, without a doubt. Yes. So theres no presumption of innocence. And that is not unusual in the 1600s. I mean, in the english legal system at this time theres no guarantee that youre going to be assumed to be innocent, for sure. And so the way they interrogate these people is if youve been accused, youre assumed to be guilty. And so what theyre really trying to do is to get her to admit that shes guilty. And you may have picked it up that she initially says, as we saw her, i didnt hurt them. But its not too long into the interrogation that she goes ahead and admits that she is a witch. Now, whether she is doing this because she wants to be let off, it becomes clear that the people who wont admit that their witches are the most likely to get executed. Youre in a kind of catch 22 here about, well, should i go ahead and admit it even if you dont actually believe that youre a witch, but it could be that in some of these cases, maybe in her case, some of these people may have actually been engaged in what they thought of as at least magical practice. And there may be a few of them who actually did regard themselves as witches. So that makes it a real conundrum can about how to to run these things, i mean, because if you have people who consider themselves to be witches, you know, in a society where everybody believes in witches, then that becomes a Law Enforcement matter, doesnt it . Do you see what i mean . I mean, its tough for us to know, you know, in our kind of secular age how do you deal with these kinds of issues, okay . And so if you look on further, they say, well, whats this appearance you see . And she says sometimes its like a hog and sometimes its like a great dog. Well, what is this, what does this animal, being say to you, they say. And she says the black dog says, serve me. Okay . But i said i am afraid. And he said if i did not, he would do worse to me. Whos the black dog . Who do you think the black dog is . Is it supposed to be say tan . I think so. Satan . Maybe a demon but probably the devil whos taken on this kind of animal specter. Now, when shes testifying about and lots of people testified along these lines, either this animal spirit attacked me, talked to me or at the bottom of the page shes talking about what else have you seen,ing two rats, a red rat and a black rat. Do you see who it is that torments these children now . Yes, its good wife. She hurts them in her own shape. So shes come to them in the spirit, and shes tormenting them in the spirit realm, but it can have physical consequences. So what do you think is going on here when pitchevah testifies to seeing these things sort of in the spirit realm . I mean, what do you think does she believe this . What do you think . I mean, this is speculative, theres no wrong answer. I dont think she actually believes what they believe in, i think shes just muppet manipulating them because she doesnt really want to be a slave anymore . Okay. So tell telling them what she thinks they want to hear. Yeah. And also its gad news if youre bad news if youre goody good. Maybe theyre people that theyre trying to settle scores with. Do you think that most of these accusations are people who are thinking consciously im going to lie about the accusation . And, again, theres no right answer on this. Its speck lalative speculative. Or do you think there are people who are so deeply convinced that witchcraft i mean, this is a riggs call christian believe, at least in demons, right . Demons are in the bible. So are remember their mentality, 1600s, medieval mentality in effect. So do you think that there are people who really do believe in these kind of things, or is it just a big sham . What do you think . I think that there probably are some people who generally, like, do, like, believe in it. But i think the people who, like, are being accused of it at that a point in time, they probably dont go into it like, yeah, im going to lie about this. But when theyre put on the spot, they probably just get so desperate that they dont want to, like, get in trouble for something that didnt happen, that they didnt do, they probably just end up pushing the blame on someone else. Yeah. And i think we can verify that. I think there are cases where late in the trials some people start recanting their testimony. And among the things that they say is i was put under so much pressure, and i think some of them would say i even started kind of imagining those things were happening to me, but now that i think about it, im not sure. But some people definitely say they were put under so much psychological duress that they just went ahead and admitted the things that they knew werent really true. And there are even a couple cases where we know that people were physically tortured. Which is, theyre also not supposed to be doing that in english law. Youre not supposed to extract confessions from people, but a couple people were. And so one of the things of torture is to say whatever you think the people want you to say. But i think its true. I think that there probably are some people, and its hard to know exactly what their mentality is, you know, but they think something is happening to them spiritually like this. And, of course, everybody involved pretty much believed that the devil was doing something in these trials, either making covenants with these witches or duping the people, deceiving the people who were making the accusations. To opponents said how do you know that the devil isnt deceiving people into believing that these attacks are real . So its tough to interpret them. But in the end,19 people were executed for being witches. Most of them were executed by hanging. One poor man was pressed to death with boll boulders until he suffocated. They were trying to get him to theres an incidence of to torture. They were trying to get him to admit that he was a witch, and he wouldnt. And so tragic situations. A few dogs were executed. Under suspicion of being witches familiars. You know, because a witch has a little animal companion that goes along with the witch [laughter] and does their bidding and so forth, so there were a few dogs that got executed as part of it. But by the end, most people involved, even some of the judges, realized that taking testimony about a persons spirit, their specter as they would call it, that taking testimony about this persons specter coming to me and encouraging me to sign the devils book, their specter came to me and physically tormented me, the judges, even some of the judges said thats not enough to convict somebody of witchcraft. And so we need to take a step back. Shut things down. But by that point, 19 people had died. By far the biggest outbreak of witchcraft in the colonial american period most cases before and after this were just one person. And there were witchcraft episodes after this, with but they were kind of on their way out by this point partly because of the embarrassment in salem. Okay . So salem is definitely feeding into a broader sense in the late 1600s, early 1700s of reliberties crisis in the colonies religious crisis in the colonies, especially in new england. And new england, again, is kind of the easiest story to tell about the coming of the great awakening because theres such a linear colonial story in new england of the puritan founding, the decline of puritanism, a sense of building religious crisis in the early 1700s, and then in the 1730 and 40s an outburst of new reliberties commitment has signaled the great religious commitment has signaled the great awakening. A lot of what im going to talk about is really tracing the story most specifically of colonial new england which is the epicenter of the great awakening in america. But the other colonies are definitely affected. Okay . So why, why do they have a sense of religious crisis . Well, one reason here is a rise apparently in greed, immorality, weve already talked about this about the signs that people were falling away from their puritan commitment. The pastors are talking all the time about how people are consume ised with Business Affairs consumed with Business Affairs and are forgetting about their love for god. Theyre worried that society is becoming dominated by greed, business and the kinds of immorality that they see coming along with that. Another reason for the sense of religious crisis is the rise of what we call enlightenment thought and a related trend which is the rise of rational theology, quoteunquote. Now, the enlightenment a term im sure youve come across before in other classes is a controversial term among historians. Historians these days are not necessarily so keen on talking about the enlightenment as if its just this one thing capital e that works the same way everywhere. We know for sure that there are different kinds of enlightenment depending on whether youre in, say, france or youre in cotland or youre in america. Some art parts of the enlightenment are a lot more antichristian, and then say in america the enlightenment tends to be fairly friendly to christianity. Well have maybe a little bit of an updated version of christianity, a little more modern version of christianity, but most of the advocates would say, well, of course were christian. Christianity is the best religion of all, and it accords with rationality and modern learning. So they wouldnt have seen a tech between those things tension between those things. One of the ways that this plays out is theres a growing tendency to explain things naturally. And for sure, when you compare the mentality of americans from, say, 1692 and the salem witchcraft trials happen to 1800 and years after the American Revolution, something has definitely changed on a popular level. Now, theres still people who believe in strong supernaturalism and even things like witchcraft. But if you go from 1692 to 1700 to 1750 to 1800, theres a declining tendency to see things in exclusively supernatural terms. So say your cow dies unexpectedly. [laughter] your cows fine one day, and the next day the cow is frothing at the mouth and keels over and dies. What do you think can has happened . Right . In 1692 you might think, especially if you had a recent argument with sort of a spooky neighbor, that a spell has been cast on your cow. And you dont, you know, its just reflexive. I mean, thats the world you live in. Its a world of wonders and magic and these kind of things, and so you might just think maybe its a ma live lent, you know malevolent spiritual attack on my livestock. In 1800 some people might still think that, but its a lot more likely that people will think, oh, well, they just, they got a disease. These things happen. Theres a medical reason for it. You may not still have a very good medical explanation for it, but you tend to think about it not in terms of spiritual powers, but just the natural world. Things happen. Theres not really any explanation for it. Not god is getting us or witches are getting us. Just my cow got sick and died. Thats a very important mental change though, isnt it . I mean, this is you see that at the beginnings of the modern secular world. Even today many devout religious people, if something bad happens to them, they dont naturally think its a spiritual attack on them. Some people might, but most people say, well, what can you do . Bad things happen. Okay . And in theology theres a related tendency to say we still study theology, we still want to understanded god as best we can, but anything we believe biblically about god must accord with rationality, okay . And so you take Something Like the doctrine of predestination which we talked about with the puritans where god elects only certain people to be saved and leaves everybody else to their own devices which means judgment and damnation, well, the rational theologians say to my mind that doesnt make sense. I dont think god would act like that. I think god would give people all the freedom to decide for themselves whether to believe or not. That accords with normal standards of rationality. But you can see and im sure some of you may agree with that, but you can see what youve done is theres a little step towards a kind of humancentered type of theology. Because god must be understandable, god must be accessible, god must live are up to kind of our standards of rationality, and that starts to influence the way that you interpret the bible. Okay . Now, that sort of theology, rational theology, had become dominant at Harvard College by the early 1700s. Harvard had been founded, the First American college founded almost exclusively for training puritan pastors in the 1630s, and by the early 1700s it had become captured by still absolutely christian theology, but this kind of rational, nonpredestinarian, in some ways nonpuritan type of theology. And so new englanders start a new college as a more conservative alternative that will kind of go back more towards puritan type of theologies, and that college was yale. [laughter] you know, yale was sort of the conservative bible college, right . [laughter] in the early 1700s so that we can have an alternative to harvard. Okay . Almost all the colonial american colleges, the ivy league schools, most of them were founded in the colonial period, and theyre almost all founded as colleges for the training of pastors. And almost nobody else goes to college. No women went to college. Almost no men went to college in those days. And if you were a man who went to college, it was almost always in the colonial period to become a pastor, okay . So what they saw as a rise in immorality, enlightenment thought, more modern kind of my philosophy and theology, and then a third reason for the sense of crisis, this ongoing war with catholic france and spain and their native American Allies. Starting in the 1690s, the colonies but especially new england go through a couple of generations of imperial war between britain and the british colonies and then either france or spain. And in new england, the main issue is fighting against the forces of france coming out of canada, or new france. What they called new france. Theres no natural boundary there. You think about it, you know, england and france are fighting in the psalm time period too, but the same time period too, but the English Channel separates them. And for the colonists in new england, theres no natural barrier. And so the french, and they had more native American Allies than the british did, so is you would have attacks from the french on frontier villages, native american raids on frontier villages sometimes even when britain and france werent technically at war, you would have new england and new france fighting these kind of lowlevel but vicious wars with one another. 1720 theres a war, you know, on the eve of the great awakening, theres a war between new france and new england thats inspired by a french catholic missionary whos operating in maine, and hes telling the indians, stick up for your rights against the english. Dont let them take your land. And they, you know, they have this war, and the new englanders commission a bounty against this priest in maine, this Catholic Priest whos, you know, encouraging the native americans. And they send out a war party against him, and they shoot him and kill him. And they scalp him, the missionary, right . They scalp him and bring his scalp back to boston. Traditionally we talk about the native americans are barbarians. Whos barbaric . The english are commissioning scalp bounties against a catholic are missionary. Its just a vicious time all the way around. So if youve got these kind of troubling intellectual changes, youve got social changes, youve got more war, such a contributing factor, the fear, the judgment of god, if we dont stick close to god, we may be overrun by the french, we may be overrun by native americans. In all these things feeding into salem witchcraft, feeding into a sense of religious crisis through the colonies i think in general, but especially in new england. 1720s, 1730s and then, guess what . You get the great awakening. Now, i mean, most people, i think, feel like the time they live in is a time of crisis. But theres no doubt that the colonists felt that crisis in the 1730s and i think culturally, religiously that set them up for a new religious awakening. And the first great awakening 1730s and 40s is kind of the main event although cascading effects of the revivals keep on going into the revolutionary period, 1770s. And its hard to explain why did the great a awakening happen exactly. You could look at social and cultural factors, you could look at the history of the decline of puritanism, and for sure some of you would look at spiritual factors that, you know, still today people will say that there are spiritual, define reasons why god divine reasons why god made this happen. In history class we dont spend much time on that kind of thing, but theres no question that in the 1720s, 1730s you find evidence of pastors across the colonies and in new england telling their people that they need to pray for revival which is a term thats occasionally used in the bible, psalms, revive us again. And what theyre talking about is that they want for the people to be praying for an outpouring of the holy spirit, third person of the trinity, to be poured out so that people will come back to god, that lots of people will convert to christianity for the first time even though basically all these people were at least nominally christian so theyll have a conversion experience and maybe people who had fallen away from god will return to god and return to their commitment to god. And so in the jeremiahads the message had been we need to straighten up and start living right and doing what we know god wants us to do. And essentially, in the 20s and 30 they tweak the message just a little bit, and they say were so far gone that what we need is define rescue. Right . We dont its not about morality anymore. What we need is a revival created by god through the holy spirit. We need that to change our society. And so i think we can reasonably expect that if pastors are calling on people to pray like this, that some people were responding to the pastors calls and praying for revival. And so in the 1730s and 40s, revival comes in a big way. And what you think about that, i think, has everything to do with what your, you know, belief is about prayer, does prayer do anything and this sort of thing. A lot of christians, for sure, would say, well, people prayed and god responded to those prayers. Itto a significant extent. It also could be if you were more skeptical, they would say, look, the more they talk about revival, the more likely it is to happen. And, actually, i think those two explanations probably can work together. So whats different about the first great a awakening . And one is its now of great religious intensity and fervor, individual passion, conversion, lifechanging events. Peoples autobiographies. But another thing thats different is the role of the itinerant preachers in the great awakening. Before this point, the standard model for a pastor is and this is most of the time in Church History is that you have a pastor who pastors his congregation and doesnt do much traveling around and speaking. Your parish, your church, thats who you speak to. But in the first great awakening, you start to see a Critical Role for traveling preachers who cause a sensation everywhere with that they go, and theyre brilliant preachers. George whitfield is number one on the list. Theyre brilliant preachers who travel around, and they become famous at least regionally if not internationally, whitfield becomes famous internationally, having a reputation of being this brilliant preacher. And you cant wait for them to get there, and its new, its exciting, and they have a laser focus, these itinerants do, on the message that you need to accept christs free offer of salvation and that you need to be born again. Born again. If youll remember, jesus talks about the born again experience in the gospel of john Chapter Three in order to see the kingdom of god, you must be born again. So theyre not inventing this kind of experience out of nowhere. Its a longtime biblical message, but people in the past maybe have had different understandings of what born again meant. People in the first great aa wakening are real awakening are real clear. What you need is that as an adult or at least, say, a teenager, you need to understand for yourself that youre a sinner, that your sin has caused a serious problem between you and god. God is offering you forgiveness through christ, what christ has done on the cross, and that you need to personally accept that offer of forgiveness in order to be in right standing with god. And when you do that, usually in a time of at least a short spiritual crisis for you, when you do that, that is your moment of being born again and that Everybody Needs to have this experience. Okay . So the parish minister, parish pastor, you know, might be talking about a lot of different topics from week to week and preaching from the bible, various but the itinerants are really focused on you need to be born again. They travel and tell people in these impassioned sermons that you need to be born again. Thats the center of their message. Sometimes they dont talk about much else. Now, the greatest mind, the greatest theologian of the great awakening is Jonathan Edwards who we have a picture of in the upper righthand corner. Edwards is best known for his sermon sinners in the hands of an angry god, 1741. And edwards is a minister in northhampton, massachusetts. He does a little bit of traveling. Most of the time he just sticks to his church like most average pastors do. But sinners in the hands of an angry god he actually gives in a nearby village in connecticut while hes crafling around in the traveling around in the summer of 1741. So edwards is not the most famous pastor, preacher at the time, but edwards has come down to us as the greatest intellectual figure of the first great awakening. And, arguably, the greatest intellect of the whole colonial american period. Now, i mean, we could do a whole class on just Jonathan Edwards because he wrote with a ton, and its very intellectually and theologically sophisticated and challenging. But hes best known for this one sermon. Sippers in the hands of sinners in the hands of an angry god. And it gets anthologized and people read it today. And its, its a good news bad news kind of thing because its an absolutely brilliant sermon, theres no question about that, and its frightening if youve ever read it. But we should not mistake edwards for some kind of screaming, you know, crazy, you know, somebody you see on late night if tv or something, you know, yelling about youre all going to hell and this kind of thing. He is a titanic intellect. The last job he had in his life was the president of the college of new jersey at princeton. So he was the president of Princeton College because he had that kind of intellectual reputation. And and he also, when he preached including sinners in the hands of an angry god when he preached, he had a manuscript in front of him that he had handwritten out, and he read the manuscript. Now, i think he would try and give it some feeling, but the power of his sermon is in the content. Its not in the rhetorical fireworks, right . So when he gave sinners in the hands of an angry god in 1741, it got an intense reaction from the people who were there. And some of the people at the meeting when he gave it started crying out for mercy. What can i do to be saved, right . If they were terrified of the judgment of god. Some were falling out in the aisles and crying and this sort of thing. And when edwards saw what was happening, it was getting noisier and noisier, he closed up his sermon. So hes not necessarily looking for, you know, this outlandish response, but he gets it because of the power of the rhetoric that he uses. And even secular scholars of the colonial period of edwards, people who dont believe in christianity if particular, they know that edwards is intellectually brilliant and that his rhetoric is just stunning. And thats one of the reasons why people today still study sinners in the hands of an angry god, because of the rhetoric of it. And especially if youve ever read it, youll never forget the image of the spider. You remember this . Have you read ill just read a couple paragraphs here. He says your wickedness makes you, as it were, heavy as lead and downwards with great weight and pressure towards hell. And if god should let you go, you would immediately sink and swiftly descend and plunge into the bottomless gulf. Then he says, the god who holds you to over the pit of hell, much as one holds a spider or some loathsome insect over the fire, abhors you and is dreadfully provoked. His wrath towards you burns like fire. He looks upon you as worthy of nothing else but to be cast9 into the fire. He is of purer eyes than to bear you in his sight. You are 10,000 times as abominable in his eyes as the most hateful, venomous serpent is in ours. You have offended him infinitely more than ever a stubborn rebel did, and yet, and yet nothing but his hand holds you from falling into the fire every moment. So you see the contrast between gods judgment and gods grace. Very intense. And he said how dreadful is the state of those that are daily and hourly in danger of this great wrath and infinite misery . But this is the dismal case of every soul in this kong rea division congregation that has not been born again. So we lay out peoples desperate case because of their sin, can and you say the rescue is available to you through being born again. Thats the basic content of virtually every great awakening sermon. Laser focus. You need to be born again. Okay. And you can imagine, i mean, its frightening, isnt it . I mean, the pit of hell, the insect over the fire and what if he let you go. What if he letses you go . Lets you go . You can imagine people following him. And theyre as sure about this as were as sure about the sun coming up. Absolutely no doubt this is proven. They dont have any doubt, and they want to make sure [inaudible] so edwards is the great defender of the great awakening. He gets stereotyped because of the sermon as a fire and brimstone preacher. Most of his sermons are not like this, i have to say. He preaches a lot more about the love of god than he does about the judgment of god. I think his most representative sermon, if i had to recommend one sermon for people to read bid wards, its called heaven by edwards, its called heaven is a world of love. You can find it on the internet. Thats, i think, the core of edwards. But if hes on the topic, hell also preach about judgment, and he can put it in terrifying terms, okay . But hes incredible i mean, i cant tell you everything. Edwards is writing about, definitely about predestination, hes writing about original sin, hes writing about enlightenment challenges to the traditional Christian Faith and how and so he becomes, hes definitely one of americas greatest theologians ever. If you care about this sort of thing, youve definitely got to read edwards. He a matches enlightenment thought with original christianity. He says we know this, say, from john locke, buts this is how this works with traditional christianity. Hes read everything. Hes using it to show why even in a an enlightened age traditional christianity still is the most compelling theological system. Its absolutely brilliant. But what he gets known for is this one sermon. Not saying its a bad sermon, but theres a lot more available. Okay . Edwards is not the most famous peacher of the time preacher of the time. Hes more famous today. The most famous preacher at the time, for sure, is George Whitfield. And i know the way its spelled, it looks like it was whitefield, but on Good Authority im told its pronounced whitfield. He is, by far, the most famous preacher of the 1740s. And its even more than that. He is the most famous person in britain and america in his time. The only competitor that he has is king george. And maybe more people know king georges name, but a lot more people have seen whitefield in person, have read whitefields stuff, his journals, his sermons. We think that probably by the end of his career he dies in 1770 that probably, like, threequarters of everybody thats lived in america had heard him preach. Hes a bigger celebrity in his time than anybody we have many our culture today. This is a closed captioning test. This is a closed captioning test. This is a closed captioning test. This is a closed captioning test. This is a closed captioning test. This is a closed captioning test. Poll, but you know what im saying. Everybody knows whitefield. Everybody, even if youre a critic, i mean, youve had to sort of deal with it. He is arguably the first modern celebrity. I didnt say religious celebrity, i said first modern celebrity. When he shows up in a town, he draws crowds often that are bigger than the population of the town itself. So he gives this farewell sermon in boston in the early 1740s, say 25,000 people show up when theres about 17,000 People Living in boston. So effectively the whole population of the town plus people from the hinterland. When he preaches in london, they say 60, 70, 80,000 people are coming to hear him, and youll remember this is preelectricity. So he does not have, what . A microphone. And if youve ever read Ben Franklins autobiography, he and franklin were close. Business Associates First and then friends. Franklin, when he when whitefield first came to philadelphia, franklin did a little experiment. Franklin does experiments, right . So hes Walking Around the edges of the crowd trying to figure out how many people can hear him speak at one time, and franklin said, you know, i think maybe 25 or 30,000 people can hear him speaking at one time. So that tells you that whitefield, he had a background in the theater as a teenager. He was a play actor before his conversion is. He knew how to project his voice. And i think he must have just been enormously loud. Okay . And hes, when he a lot of the portraits we have of whitefield are when hes old and kind of sick, so i like portraits like this one when hes a young man. Relatively young. They thought he was good looking. You know, tell for yourself what you think about that. Young man, very dynamic. And unlike edwards, whitefields presentations were without a manuscript. He would pretty much memorize his sermons, and he had a repertory of, you know, a selection of, say, 10 or 15 sermons that he would kind of rotate through. He didnt have a congregation, and so he could really polish a short list of sermons, and he had them memorized. On the fly, hed see what people were reacting to, and hes moving around the stage. And he would, in effect, act out if hes talking about, say, the story of the prodigal son from the gospel, he would put himself almost in the character of, say, the father waiting for the prodigal son to come back. And, you know, he would act me thinks i see the father wait waiting for the lost son to come back. And he would act it out, you know, and act out the part of the son there in the pig pen eating the stuff that they threw out only fit for the pigs to eat. Hes acting these things. And sometimes he would even be, you know, weeping the beta that an actor the way that an actor weeps. Not because its fake, but because hes into the story. It was very powerful. If i could just have a youtube clip, you know, of anybody besides maybe jesus, right . I mean, i would love to have a youtube clip of George Whitefield to see what it was like. But people were just blown away when they would hear him speak. I love this this might be my favorite painting of whitefield, and its because of the woman. Not so much i like it that its young whitefield, but i love the woman. You know, shes, like, i cant believe im in the front row of a whitefield painting, right . But you can tell she is smitten. This is the first british lighter electronic age but thats the kind of effect that whitefield had on people. Obviously a very different message. But this is revival for sure, but theres a celebrity sensation that he creates. So, huge responses, huge crowds. Reports that hes coming, you know, months in advance. Got to get there early, right . And they would tell people, park your horses at the margins of the crowd, so that more people can get in. Its a mosh pit being upfront. I mean, packed together. As close as you can get. If you are are on the margins of the crowd, you want to be, just off in the distance, you could hear him preach. But hey, its a whitefield event. Britain, america, had never seen anything like this before. The reason why whitefield is not more famous today i mean, hes known, kind of christian devotees of whitefield but its because his brilliance was encapsulated in the sermon as delivered. You had to be there to really get it. Ive written a book on whitefield and i have the sense that i still dont quite get it because i dont have my youtube clip. Right . Where edwardss brilliance is captured on the printed page, you didnt have to be there, because its his ideas. I mean, they are captured on the page. Okay . So religious fervor and to people who are not into this sort of thing, people who are not christian, not religious, not devout themselves, it may seem like, well, its sort of this quaint thing that happened in the seventeen thirties and forties, worth knowing about, but maybe not that interesting to people on the outside. But i will say that the great awakenings also significant because of the controversy, culturally, socially, that it creates. It is extraordinarily controversial and disruptive in colonial society. It is the biggest upheaval in the british colonies before the American Revolution, happening 30 years before the American Revolution. Its the biggest social upheaval in the colonies before the American Revolution. So even from secular perspective, this is a big deal. Part of the reason for this is because during the great awakening, pastors are getting challenged like they never have before. Of course, in the 1730s, 1740s, being a pastor is a very socially respected office. And if you have any state church, and established religion, then the pastor is on the government payroll, and hes a representative of the government as well as the church. And so, if you attack the pastor, youre attacking a representative of the state. And that just never was done, at least not very often before the great awakening. But some of the itinerants, even whitefield from time to time, especially early on, would suggest incredibly controversial things about the official ministers, and he would say, you know, your pastor is not very supportive of the revival, is he . Hes uncomfortable with this new work of god thats broken out. Do you know why that might be . I think its because your pastor himself may not actually be a converted christian. [laughs] now, thats a rude thing to say about the pastor, isnt it . I mean, you know, this is and the pastor does not like this. The pastor is extremely offended to have these touring itinerant come around, come into town, maybe even stand up in the pulpit of your church, and say, i think your pastor may not even be converted, and thats why hes not sufficiently supportive of the revivalists. Nobodys ever spoken about pastors this way before. Extremely controversial. The radical people preachers the ones who were just really inflammatory, an example is James Davenport, who you all have read about, hes the most radical, controversial preacher in new england, he goes into churches early on, and he starts naming names. Ive got a list here of all the pastors in boston who are not converted. Theyre going to hell. Can you imagine . I mean, especially in the colonial world, someone showing up and saying that sort of thing . They start passing laws against itinerant like this, telling them that they cannot go uninvited into a pastors pulpit. Theyll be arrested if they do. So this is becoming a legal, political controversy, okay . Another reason its controversial is because you start to see some common people, usually men but even occasionally women, who believe that they should be able to preach without a formal education. The way this works is that they say, look, i know im converted. I know im born again. I know what had happened. I mean, three months ago. Im filled with the holy spirit. My pastor is not supportive of the revivals. Im not even sure hes a converted christian. I should be able to preach. It doesnt matter whether i have gone to harvard and yale or oxford or cambridge, that doesnt matter. What matters is that youre filled with the holy spirit and that your supportive of the work of god. So farmers, you know, who dont go to college, for sure. Occasionally native americans who were converted in the revivals. Occasionally slaves start standing up in the meeting and saying, i have a word from god for you. And pastors like James Davenport will say, listen to this brother. Listen to this sister. She has something to say to us thats from the lord. There are no social settings anywhere else in colonial america where you will see women, slaves, native americans, standing up and addressing in this even so somewhat authoritative way, white men. You just dont see it. It doesnt happen anywhere else but these kind of revival meetings. So, you can understand, the critics say, this is crazy man, you all are nuts this is socially disruptive. Okay . Moving out from beyond just the simple religious message, this is socially disruptive. And the critics say, this is just a bunch of frenzy. Its what they would call enthusiasm at the time. Its bad in the 1700s to be enthusiastic. That means your half crazy. And thats what the critics said this was. Its just a bunch of who we. But it doesnt mean anything. And these people are just getting whipped up into emotion but its not actually doing anything for them spiritually. The critics say, what we need is love, charity, devotion to your pastor. All right. What difference does the great awakening make . One of the most obvious differences is that the great awakening brings about a sea change in which churches are the most popular and prominent and this is a change that continues on into the 1800s as part of the second great awakening. In the colonial period, the most prominent churches are a church of england, the congregation less church, which is the church of the puritans, and some other domino emanations like that. In the great awakening you start to see the emergence of new denominations that are eventually going to become the largest protestant churches in america, especially, most notably, the baptist churches, which have been around for a while but pretty small, isolated. They start to become more popular because of the great awakening and evangelistic. And one of the first places that the baptists sent missionaries coming out of the great awakenings guess where . The south. All right . So the great awakening starts to begin the process by which the south would become much more heavily christian and some of the most popular churches, of course, in the south are going to be the baptist and then a methodists. The methodists are a Movement First within the church of england. Whitfield is a methodist. You may know the name john wesley who becomes sort of the founding father of after the American Revolution, the methodist go out on the frontier and establish, eventually, thousands of new churches so that by the time of the civil war the methodists have gone from being nonexistent in the beginning of the great awakening to by the time of the civil war theyre the largest protestant denomination in america. So the congregationists, the church of england, anglican church, what comes to be known as the episcopal church, they are kind of left behind in in terms of numbers. And the baptist and methodists come to the fore. Obviously, for baylor, that is a significant baptist. Get as far out of Central Texas by 18 forties and establishing not only churches but a college, baylor. Okay . So thats pretty important to us. The revivals, as you can see, begin in new england, in the middle colleges, new jersey, pennsylvania very heavily affected by the revivals. Slowly spread into the southern colonies by the 17 fifties. Theyre also happening in britain and Continental Europe the great awakening ive talked exclusively about america today, but it is an international phenomenon. Okay . It is a transatlantic event. Seen most obviously in the person of whitefield, who is from britain. But he comes to america seven times. Okay . Whats the importance of the great awakening . Some historians have argued that its an important prelude to the American Revolution. Its vivid its debatable. Its a debatable issue because of the way the argument goes, well, if it does big social upheaval, and its 30 years before the American Revolution, doesnt it have a kind of conditioning effect on American Culture to get it ready for the American Revolution . And id say, yeah, i mean probably in an indirect way, it does. But we also have to remember that britain has its great awakening too, and britain, you know, is our opponent in the American Revolution. So its not quite as simple as, i definitely wouldnt want to say that the great awakening somehow causes the American Revolution. But influences the culture . Yeah, i think so. I think so. And then for sure, i mean, youre on more solid ground if you say, well, the great awakening inaugurated this evangelical movement within christianity, which remains, in some kind of different forms, its taken twists and turns, you know, billy graham and people like this in the 20th century. You know, different formats and so forth, but really, whitefield is the beginning of this sort of evangelical movement within christianity that especially when you look at it in a global context is enormously significant today and shows no sign of slowing down, and in many parts of the world, continues to be growing. And some of the leaders in places like Subsaharan Africa and similar to the evangelical movement. Guess what . They look to people like whitefield and john where do its edwards as examples. I guess theres kind evangelical movement from at least 17 thirties and forties right on through today. So for sure, thats a reason why the me know if you have any questions about your paper, okay . If youre enjoying American History tv, sign up for a newsletter using the qr code on our tv to move like lectures of history, the presidency, and more. Sign up for the American History tv newsletter today, and be sure to watch American History tv every saturday, or anytime online at cspan. 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