Published online by Cambridge University Press: 09 January 2017
Current interpretations of North America's first Great Awakening present a paradox. Historians commonly interpret the Great Awakening as part of the revival of evangelical piety that affected widely scattered elements of the Protestant world in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries; however, studies of the Great Awakening have almost exclusively focused on the particular local circumstances in which the revival movements developed. Since historians of the Great Awakening have emphasized the peculiar circumstances of each of the regional manifestations, the Revival often appears in their writings to have been composed of several distinct movements separated in time, character, and cause and united only by superficial similarities. In contrast, to say that the local revival movements, despite their distinctive characteristics, were manifestations of a single larger movement is to imply that they shared the same general causes. If we suppose that the Great Awakening was part of the Evangelical Revival, our attempts to explain its origins should take into account those general causes.
Two recent reconsiderations of the eighteenth-century revival movements in their broader context come to opposite conclusions. Jon Butler underscores the span of time over which the revivals occurred across the British colonies, their heterogeneous character from one region to the next, and the differences in cultural contexts in which they appeared. He concludes that “the prerevolutionary revivals should be understood primarily as regional events.” Although he sees the eighteenth-century American revivals as part of the long-term evangelical and pietistic reform movement in Western society, he denies any common, single, overwhelmingly important cause.
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5 I have chosen England and New England for this comparison rather than another likely pairing—England and the middle colonies—because there was a significant similarity in context between New England and England: the Evangelical Revival in both arose within the dominant, established churches in each area, whereas the awakening in the middle colonies occurred in a much more fully developed context of denominational competition among equals; in England and New England, the Revival was the product of an attempt to revitalize long-standing churches, whereas, in the middle colonies, the Revival had as much to do with organization of churches among recent settlers as it had with revitalization.
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72 The question whether conversion actually helped persons to accept new responsibilities and to lead more autonomous lives, as well as other questions about the consequences of the Revival, lies beyond the scope of this essay.