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2007-09-16 11:57:38 · 3 answers · asked by Anon E. Mous A 1 in Arts & Humanities History

3 answers

Here are a few ways the Awakening helped change people's attitudes in ways that (re)shaped American society:

1) The Awakening spread across the colonies, with much co-operation amongst them. This helped establish foundations for the colonies' working together, so important to the growth of a united colonial movement in the 1760s and to a unified nation later.

2) The Awakening also crossed denominational boundaries, while causing some tensions WITHIN several denominations. This contributed to less power in the individual denominations and to more tolerance of those of like-mind in OTHER churches -- a key step in the national move toward NOT adopting a "state church" (religious freedom).

3) One characteristic of the Awakening was a greater emphasis on "experientialism" -- on the individual's religious experience. This was a factor in shaping later revivals and 19th century "evangelicalism" in ways both positive (individual responsibility and calling) and less positive (emotional excesses).

4) The religious revival was combined with a moral-SOCIAL awakening. Out of this revival (and its sister "Methodist" revivals in Britain) sprang greater social concerns and 'campaigns', including the anti-slavery movement (beginning with opposing the slave trade), temperance movement... and others. (Trends toward more inclusive 'democracy' also owed something to this... related to the attitudes mentioned in #1-2.)

2007-09-20 07:40:15 · answer #1 · answered by bruhaha 7 · 2 2

brought more religious awareness and raised moral standards for the colonists.

2007-09-16 12:50:13 · answer #2 · answered by WonderWoman 5 · 0 2

moral standards

2007-09-20 09:56:47 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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