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The Religious Impacts Of The First Great Awakening And The Enlightenment

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Both The First Great Awakening and The Enlightenment generated an instant trend in the revival of religious influences. Started by Jonathan Edwards and George Whitefield, the Great Awakening was most commonly understood to have its greatest religious impact between the 1730s and 1740s. American colonists had begun to become more devoted to various religions, which resulted in the toleration of many of them. Another cause of this revival dated back to the late seventeenth and early eighteenth centuries when a German movement, called Pietism, emphasized closely distinct personal connections with God (Gullotta, 2016). This movement spread as a result British, German, Scottish, Scotch-Irish immigration that then influenced British and Dutch religion (Gullotta, 2016). As a consequence, American colonists had begun to become more devoted to various religions, which resulted in the toleration of many of them.
One of the effects of The Great Awakening on the British North American colonists was the religious rule. The ties between culture and politics through religious movements changed the norms of the colonists. Other than immigrants from town to town the visitation of preachers caused an emergence of opposition about the truth of the church and creation of new sects and Protestant denominations. A few of the preachers who led these preaching tours included George Whitefield, Theodore Jacob Frelinghugusen, James Davenport, Samuel Davis, and Gilbert Tennent (Gullotta, 2016).

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