PPT-Lesson 5.1 The Great Awakening
Author : marina-yarberry | Published Date : 2018-11-09
and the Enlightenment How did the Great Awakening and the Enlightenment influence the colonists desire for independence Essential Question 1 Explain the colonial
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Lesson 5.1 The Great Awakening: Transcript
and the Enlightenment How did the Great Awakening and the Enlightenment influence the colonists desire for independence Essential Question 1 Explain the colonial social ranks see page 136. By Kate Chopin. Project By: Zach Almon. Ashley . Doughtery. Landon Baker. Kristen Kursave. Our Excerpt From the Book:. Chapter . 19, page . 68. Excerpt:. It moved her with recollections. She could hear again the . Great Awakening. Religious Revival . (1730s-1740s). EMOTIONAL. “Fire and Brimstone” Preaching. Calvinist-influenced. Human sinfulness . inherent. Social Divisions. Edwards. Questions to consider. Spreading the Word . American churches in some colonies had official state churches . Massachusetts, Connecticut, Maryland, Virginia, the Carolinas, and Georgia . some churches were decentralized and . APUSH Review: The 1. st. Great Awakening. Everything You Need To Know About The First Great Awakening To Succeed In APUSH. Religious Revival from the 1730s – . 1770s. Increase importance of Christianity. The Enlightenment and the Great Awakening. Late 1600s-1700s: An intellectual movement known as the Enlightenment began in Europe. Later a religious movement known as the Great Awakening started in the Colonies . First part of . 1700’s. The Great Awakening was a spiritual renewal that swept the American Colonies, particularly New England, during the first half of the 18th Century. It began in England before catching fire across the Atlantic. . Key Religions. Deism. :. Relied on reason rather than revelation, science rather than the Bible. Believed in God. Unitarians. God only existed in 1 person; Jesus is not divine. Free will, possibility of salvation through good works. “Sinners in the Hands of an Angry God”. Rev. Jonathan Edwards (1703-1758). The Great Awakening. What historians call "the first Great Awakening" can best be described as a revitalization of religious piety that swept through the American colonies between the 1730s and the 1770s.. What was the Great Awakening?. Religious revival movement.. Evangelicalism-- “new birth” is the ultimate religious experience.. Followers accept that they are sinners and ask for salvation.. Before the Great Awakening. Learning Objectives. Explain . the characteristics of religious belief associated with the First Great Awakening. Identify and discuss the ideas of Jonathan Edwards, one of the leading preachers associated with the First Great . What was the Great Awakening?. Religious revival movement. Evangelicism – “new birth” considered the ultimate religious experience. Followers accepted that they were sinners and asked for salvation. and . the . Enlightenment. What role did the Great Awakening and the Enlightenment play in moving the colonists toward revolution?. Essential Question. divine right:. denomination. :. specific religious group. . A religious revival movement that spread throughout the colonies from the 1720s-1740s. The Great Awakening. Origins . Enlightenment . rationalism. Enlightenment corrupted the Anglican Church. But Enlightenment did affect emphasis on the individual. The Story. Edna Pontellier, a young wife and mother, struggles against her sense of duty and personal identity. . Her journey is not a quest for superiority, but rather equality. . The reader quickly comes to see how she feels trapped in her roles of wife and mother—a situation Chopin seems to want us to recognize as rather ordinary in this time period. .
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