religious revival
The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition | Date: 2008
religious revival renewal of attention to religious faith and service in a church or community, usually following a period of comparative inactivity and frequently marked by intense fervor. As applied to the Christian religion, the phrase belongs to modern times, dating from the 18th cent.; but such experience is described in scriptural accounts. The development of the Protestant movements in the 14th, 15th, and 16th cent. was in the nature of a series of revivals under the leadership of John Wyclif , Jan Huss , Martin Luther , John Calvin , Huldreich Zwingli , and others. But revivals, so called, began (c.1737) in Europe with the evangelical awakening in England under John and Charles Wesley and George Whitefield . Under their direction an army of itinerant and local workers and of missionaries spread the spirit of Methodist evangelism with amazing rapidity over Great Britain, into Ireland, and across the seas. Almost simultaneously with the Methodist movement, the Great Awakening began in America; given stimulus by Whitefield, revivals were started in 1720 by Theodore Frelinghuysen of New Jersey and in 1734 by Jonathan Edwards of Massachusetts. The newer settlements in the South and West experienced a wave of religious animation characterized by emotional excitement and physical manifestations. The movement was developed c.1797 in Kentucky under the preaching of James McGready. From these meetings held in the open developed the camp meeting . Professional revivalists were Timothy Dwight, grandson of Jonathan Edwards, Lyman Beecher, Asahel Nettleton, and Charles Grandison Finney. The preeminent figure in 19th cent. revivalistic history in the United States and Great Britain was Dwight L. Moody , who, with the singing evangelist Ira D. Sankey, moved vast audiences for more than 25 years. Revival campaigns in the postwar period, which should be distinguished from those of practitioners of faith healing , have been conducted by B. Fay Mills, Sam Jones, J. Wilbur Chapman, R. A. Torrey, Billy Sunday , Gipsy Smith, Aimee Semple McPherson, and Billy Graham . Pentecostalism in its older and newer forms is sometimes interpreteted as a continuous revival in the Church. Modern revivalism has made use of television to greatly expand its audience. Missionary efforts have sparked revivals in countries such as Korea, Indonesia, and more recently, throughout South America.
Bibliography: See B. A. Weisberger, They Gathered at the River (1958, repr. 1966); W. G. McLoughlin, Revivals, Awakenings, and Reform (1978); S. S. Sizer, Gospel Hymns and Social Religion (1978); E. E. Cairns, An Endless Line of Splendor (1986).
Author not available, REVIVAL, RELIGIOUS.,
The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition 2008
The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. Copyright 2008 Columbia University Press
Related newspaper, magazine, and journal articles from HighBeam Research
|
Jonathan Edwards: A Life.(Book Review)
The Historian; 3/22/2005; Middlekauff, Robert; 528 words
; Jonathan Edwards: A Life. By George M. Marsden. (New Haven: Yale University Press, 2003. Pp. xxi, 615. $35.00.) This book surpasses all earlier biographies of Jonathan Edwards. It is simply superb in its monumental scope, in its research into every corner of Edwards's life and much of his world,
Read more
|
|
JONATHAN EDWARDS IN THE TWENTIETH CENTURY
Journal of the Evangelical Theological Society; 12/1/2004; Minkema, Kenneth P; 9311 words
; It is hard to imagine that anyone interested in Jonathan Edwards, the great eighteenth-century American theologian, revivalist, and missionary, did not know that 2003 was the 300th anniversary of his birth. This milestone was marked by numerous commemorative conferences, symposia, lecture series,
Read more
|
|
Jonathan Edwards: A Life
The Catholic Historical Review; 10/1/2003; Bombaro, John J; 807 words
; Jonathan Edwards: A Life. By George M. Marsden. (New Haven: Yale University Press. 2003. Pp. 640. $35.00.) Since the initiation of the Yale University letterpress edition of The Works of Jonathan Edwards nearly fifty years ago, twentieth- and (now) twenty-first century scholars and devotees of the
Read more
|
|
"In love with the Image": transitive being and typological desire in Jonathan Edwards.(Critical essay)
Early American Literature; 3/22/2006; Leader, Jennifer L.; 12114 words
; Perhaps there is not one leaf of a tree, nor spire of grass, but what has effects all over the universe, and will have to the end of eternity. --Jonathan Edwards, 1721 I find letters from God dropped in the street, and every one is signed by God's name, And I leave them where they are, for I know
Read more
|
|
The Cambridge Companion to Jonathan Edwards.(Book review)
Theological Studies; 6/1/2008; Valeri, Mark; 798 words
; THE CAMBRIDGE COMPANION TO JONATHAN EDWARDS. Edited by Stephen J. Stein. Cambridge Companions to Religion. New York: Cambridge University, 2007. Pp. xix + 374. $85; $27.99. As the tercentenary of his 1703 birth neared, historians, theologians, and literary scholars of early America commenced a
Read more
|
|
A stroll in Northampton.(Faith matters)(Jonathan Edwards)
The Christian Century; 10/4/2003; Zaleski, Carol; 859 words
; ... Being is torment unending, and this is where we abide even now if we are bereft of God. Yet after the jeremiad comes the good news: Now you have an extraordinary opportunity, a day wherein Christ has flung the door of mercy wide open. I returned to Main Street ...
Read more
|
|
Old age and religion in the writings and life of Jonathan Edwards.
Church History; 12/1/2001; Minkema, Kenneth P.; 13649 words
; ... religious concerns among older individuals were wanting. If we look at magazines such as The Christian History, which collected news of revivals from both sides of the Atlantic, we see that, however much contributors tried to paint a rosy picture of awakenings ...
Read more
|
|
America's first superstar preacher; Jonathan Edwards made saints rejoice and sinners quake.(FEATURES)(BOOKS)
The Christian Science Monitor; 3/6/2003; 722 words
; Byline: Thomas D'Evelyn Widely considered to be foremost among American religious thinkers, Jonathan Edwards (1703-1801) lived a life of passionate devotion. Indeed, his preaching fueled the Great Awakening, a period of spectacular revivals that ran through the Colonies during the mid 1700s,
Read more
|
|
Jonathan Edwards: a Life.(Book Review)
Christianity and Literature; 9/22/2004; Ditmore, Michael G.; 1682 words
; Jonathan Edwards: A Life. By George M. Marsden. New Haven: Yale University Press, 2003. ISBN 0-300-09693-3. Pp. xxii + 615. $35.00. Jonathan Edwards sought to replenish Calvinism with the more advanced ideas of the European Enlightenment, and to render doctrines transparently plain, logically
Read more
|
|
SPORTS POLITICS: Jonathan Edwards.(Sport)
The Birmingham Post (England); 2/8/2003; 16 words
; Olympic and world triple jump champion Jonathan Edwards has been appointed to the UK Athletics Council.
Read more
|
Related entries from encyclopedias, dictionaries, and thesauruses
|
religious revival
A Dictionary of Sociology
religious revival A term applied to mass movements which are based upon intense religious excitement. Periodic religious revivals, which seek to restore commitment ... a regular sociological feature of religious traditions. The evangelical revival of the eighteenth century ...
Read more
|
|
Revival and Renewal
American Eras
... faint or cry out. The revivals of the revolutionary ... The leader of the revivals in New England was ... be the basis of true religious experience. His listeners ... to the idea of human free will, which was gaining ... that humans could make free choices, but only within ... revolutionary period ... .
Read more
|
|
revival
The Oxford Pocket Dictionary of Current English
... condition or strength of something: a revival in the fortunes of the party an economic revival. ∎ an instance of ... cross-country skiing is enjoying a revival. ∎ a new production ... ∎ a reawakening of religious fervor, esp. by means of a series of evangelistic ...
Read more
|
|
Gothic revival
The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
... Middle Ages. Although the Gothic revival was practiced throughout Europe ... of the basic texts of the Gothic revival. In Contrasts (1836) he put forth ... conflict with proponents of the classic revival , and the resulting conflict has ... restoration of a great number of medieval religious buildings ... .
Read more
|
|
The Religious Crisis of Removal
American Eras
The Religious Crisis of Removal The Cherokees and Accommodation. By ... triggered stress within the Cherokee communities. The first religious tensions appeared in 1811, when several minor prophets ... prophetic awakenings probably lent strength to the Cherokee revival — as did the spectacular comet and ...
Read more
|