CHAPTER IV
The Great Revival Of 1800
The Deplorable Conditions of the Country?Low
State of Morals?Terrible Practices?Deistical Opinions of the
French and Indian Wars?Alliance of America and France?The
Effects of French Infidelity?Thomas Paine?Infidel
Clubs?Illuminism?Want of Religious Instruction?Baptist and
Presbyterian Ministers?Dull Preaching?Conditions in the
Colleges?Kentucky and Tennessee?Logan County?The Great
Revival?James McGready?His Sermons?The Camp Meeting at
Casper River?The Account of McGready?The Meeting
Described?Barton W. Stone?Other
Meetings?Extravagance?Lorenzo Dow?The Jerks and Other
Violent Exercises?Disorders?Such Meetings Continued for
Years?The Revival Did Great Good?Testimonies?Results Among
the Baptists?Effects Felt Throughout the United States.
At the close of the eighteenth
century the prospects of Christianity in the United States were
most deplorably unfavorable. All parties testified to this state
of affairs. The Revolutionary War had brought about a great deal
of license, and all classes of witnesses testify to the low
state of morals. George Mason wrote, in 1783; to Patrick Henry
as follows: "With some few exceptions, the declension was
general throughout the State" (Rowland, Life of Mason,
II). Dr. William Hill said: "The demoralizing effects of the war
left religion and the church in a most deplorable condition"
(Foote, I.). Semple says: "The war, though very propitious to
the liberty of the Baptists, had the opposite effect upon the
life of religion among them" (Semple). Richard Henry Lee said:
"Refiners may weave reason into as fine a web as they please,
but the experience of all times shows religion to be the
guardian of morals; and he must be a very inattentive observer
in our country who does not see that avarice is accomplishing
the destruction of religion for want of legal obligation to
contribute something to its support" (Lee, Richard Henry Lee,
II.).
A general
declension of religion followed the earlier revivals, and a low
standard of religion and morals prevailed. Family worship was
neglected, and little attention was paid to the training of
youth in the fear of God. The Indian wars having terminated, an
immense tide of immigration poured into the older settlements.
The protracted wars with the Indians had exerted a demoralizing
influence to a wide extent; but the introduction and manufacture
of alcoholic liquors followed, and their use, in almost every
family, was frightfully destructive. Brandy was distilled from
the peach, and wine fermented from the grape, and beer from the
persimmon. As early as 1783 whisky had been distilled from corn,
and that was now in use daily as mint julep or as grog or toddy.
Those who could afford it had Madeira wine and Jamaica rum on
their tables, but the ordinary drink was whisky. The Green River
Country, as the southern part of Kentucky was called, became
famous for vicious practices. Universal cupidity prevailed over
the whole country, stimulated by boundless opportunities for its
gratification. Speculators were eager to invest their capital in
lands, hoping to realize princely fortunes thereby. Many of the
pioneers who had located lands lost all their possessions on
account of imperfect titles. Land jobbing feuds and heart
burnings retarded the moral improvement of the country.
Deistical
opinions were really introduced into America during the French
and Indian wars (1754-1763) . In these wars American citizens
were brought into close relations with English officers and
soldiers who had accepted deistical sentiments. "Most of their
American companions had never heard the divine origin of the
Scriptures questioned, and their minds were, of course,
unprovided with answers even to the most common objections. To
such objections as were actually made was added the force of
authority. The British officers were from the mother country -a
phase of high import-until after the commencement of the
Revolution. They came from a country renowned for arts and arms,
and regarded by the people of New England as the birthplace of
science and wisdom. These gentlemen were also, at the same time,
possessed of engaging manners; they practiced all those genteel
vices which, when recommended by such manners, generally
fascinated young men of gay, ambitious minds, and are often
considered as conferring an enviable distinction on those who
adopt them. Many of the Americans were far from being dull
proficients in this school. The vices they loved, and soon found
the principles necessary to quiet their consciences. When they
returned home they had drunk too deeply of the cup to exchange
their new principles and practices for the sober doctrines of
their countrymen. The means that had been pursued to corrupt
them they now employed to corrupt others. From the prima mali
labes the contagion spread, not indeed through the great
multitudes, but in little circles surrounding the individuals
originally infected. As these amounted to a considerable number,
and lived in a general dispersion through the country, most
parts of it shared in the malady" (Dwight, Travels in New
England and New York, IV).
The alliance of
America with France likewise brought a low state of morals,
which menaced the nation with political destruction. Collins,
the historian of Kentucky, thus describes the situation:
Early in
the spring of 1793, circumstances occurred which fanned the
passions of the people into a perfect flame of
dissatisfaction. The French Revolution had sounded a tocsin
which reverberated throughout the whole civilized world. The
worn out despotisms of Europe, after standing aghast for a
moment, in doubtful inactivity, and awakened at length into
ill-concerted combinations against the young Republic, and
France was engaged in a life and death struggle, against
Spain, Britain, Prussia, Austria and the German
principalities. With this war the United States had,
strictly, nothing to do, and the best interests of the
country clearly required a rigid neutrality; which President
Washington had not only sagacity to see, but firmness to
enforce by a proclamation, early in 1793. The passions of
the people, however, far outran all consideration of
prudence or interest, and displayed themselves in favor of
France, with a frantic enthusiasm which threatened
perpetually to involve the country in a disastrous war with
all the rest of Europe. The terrible energy which the French
Republic displayed, against such fearful odds, the haughty
crest with which she confronted her enemies and repelled
them from her frontier on every point, presented a spectacle
calculated to dazzle the friends of democracy throughout the
world. The horrible atrocities which accompanied these
brilliant efforts of courage were overlooked in favor of a
passionate sympathy, or attributed, in part, to the
exaggerations of the British press.
The
American people loved France as their ally in the
Revolution, and now regarded her as a sister republic
contending for freedom against banded despots (Collins,
Historical Sketches of Kentucky).
French
infidelity threatened to sweep away every trace of Christianity.
Our country had innumerable difficulties with England, which had
resulted from the cruel Indian wars. France had been our friend
in the War of Independence. The very name of liberty was dear to
every American heart, and in the mystery of Providence,
infidelity and liberalism were combined against despotism.
Infidelity became prevalent in high places, and was identical in
the public mind with liberal principles in government. "It was
the general opinion among intelligent Christians, toward the
close of the century, a majority of the population were either
avowedly infidels or skeptically inclined. There were but few
men in the profession of law and physics who would avow their
belief in Christianity. Amongst the less informed classes the
?Age of Reason? was a most popular book, and obtained extensive
circulation, while Bibles were obtained with difficulty, and
found a place only in religious families" (J. M. Peck, Baptists
in Mississippi Valley, The Christian Review, XVII. 500.
October, 1852).
Of Thomas Paine
much has been written. He is thus described by McMaster:
We doubt
whether any name in our Revolutionary history, not excepting
that of Benedict Arnold, is quite so odious as that of
Thomas Paine. Arnold was a traitor, Paine was an infidel.?
Since the day when the Age of Reason came forth from
the press the number of infidels has increased much more
rapidly than it did before that book was written. The truth
is, he was one of the most remarkable men of ,his time. It
would be a difficult matter to find anywhere another such
compound of baseness and nobleness, of goodness and badness,
of greatness and littleness, of so powerful a mind left
unbalanced and led astray by the worst of animal passions.?
Of all the human kind he is the filthiest and nastiest, and
his disgusting habits grew upon him with his years. In his
old age, when the frugal gifts of two States which
remembered his good work and placed him beyond immediate
want, he became a sight to behold. It was rare that he was
sober; it was still rarer that he washed himself, and he
suffered his nails to grow till, in the language of one who
knew him well, they resembled the claws of birds. What
gratitude was he did not know (McMaster, History of the
United States, I. 150. New York, 1884).
The Age of
Reason was introduced into this country about the close of
the century. There was great activity manifested by the infidels
of Europe in disseminating their views in the new country. In
the year 1800 John Adams, then President of the United
States, received a letter from Germany, proposing to introduce
into the United States "a company of school-masters, painters
and poets, etc., all the disciples of Thomas Paine." Adams
replied:
I had
rather countenance the introduction of Ariel and Caliban
with a troupe of spirits the most mischievous from the fairy
land (Adams, Life and Works, IX.).
Politico-infidel clubs were organized throughout the United
States, and so great was the threatened danger that President
Adams referred to them in a public proclamation. A society was
formed in this country called the Illuminati set on foot
by the Grand Orient of France. The facts are set forth as
follows:
Illuminism had been
systematically embraced by various bodies of men who
associated for its propaganda. President Adams, in a
proclamation in which he briefly disclosed the dangers that
threatened the country, had said: "The most precious
interests of the United States are still held in jeopardy by
the hostile designs and insidious arts of a foreign nation
(France), as well as by the dissemination among them of
those principles subversive of the foundations of religious,
moral and social obligations, that have produced mischiefs
and misery in other countries." The violent assaults which
were made upon this passage of the proclamation proved the
truth and accuracy of the sentiment. Enraged at this public
disclosure of their plans the whole faction attacked it (Memoir
of Thomas Jefferson, 1809).
The extent to
which these infidel clubs went is now almost unbelievable. "The
Tree of Liberty" and "the Cap of Liberty" were everywhere
popular. "It is scarcely credible to what extent the
absurdities, devised and practised by the French demagogues to
influence the passions of the mob, were adopted and applauded by
multitudes of the hitherto staid and reflecting citizens of the
United States" (Jay, Life of the Hon. John Jay, 319. New
York, 1832). William Jay further says:
Posterity
will with difficulty believe the prostituted state to which
Genet (the French Ambassador) and his satellites, the
democratic societies, had brought the public feeling. By a
variety of those artifices which familiarized the heart to
cruelty, they had enured the multitude to the contemplation
of bloodshed and to habitual ferocity. At a dinner in
Philadelphia, at which Governor Miffin and his friend Dallas
were present, a roasted pig was introduced as the
representative of the unfortunate Louis XVI. It was the
joyful celebration of the anniversary of his murder. The
head, being severed from the body, was carried round to each
at the table, who, after putting on the liberty cap,
pronounced the word "Tyrant!" and gave the head a chop with
his knife (Memoirs of Hon. Thomas Jefferson, Progress
of French Influence and French Principles in the United
States, I.).
In America as
well as in France the most atrocious villainies were maintained
to be patriotic acts. Robbery was held to be moral and correct
justice; murder was maintained to be laudable; and those most
execrable of all crimes, treason and rebellion, were dignified
by the name of national justice, because Jacobinized France gave
the fashion to the morals and the opinions of this country, and
fidelity to her, under her new rulers, was best asserted by
treason to every other country (Ibid).
The object of
these societies was to destroy Christianity and to revolutionize
governments. The belief in a God, the immortality of the soul,
moral obligation, civil and domestic government, marriage,
chastity and decency were the objects of their hatred and
conspiracy. Wherever they prevailed the most gross and brutish
manners and shameless immorality followed (Dorchester).
Dr. Peck
further says:
The only
Bibles in the country were those brought by immigrants. If a
young couple, who were Christian professors, had formed the
domestic relationship in a log cabin in the West, they had
no Bible to read perchance, after many months waiting, some
kind friend brought one in his saddle bags, across the
mountains, from the old states. A manuscript volume of hymns
is in our possession, compiled by one of the pioneer
preachers of Kentucky for his own use as an itinerant, and
it bears marks of being well thumbed by the preacher. Nor
were tracts then circulated; and few religious books of any
kind had found their way into the Valley.
And what
strength had the Christian ministry to cope with such an
enemy, learned, proud, philosophical, speculative and
subtle? The Baptists had ninety-five preachers of every
grade, not one of whom was a classical scholar, or had the
skill, or understood the tactics of the opponents of the
Scripture. They had never been trained in, nor could they
put on the armor of, the "schools of the prophets." They had
no pretentions to the arts of the logician in debate. There
were about a dozen Methodist preachers in the Valley,
equally deficient in education, and unskilled as casuists.
Of the Presbyterian ministers, there were about forty, all
of whom made some claim to a classical and collegiate
education.
In reality the
Presbyterians were far worse off in ministers than were the
Baptists. Their historian, Dr. Davidson, has in no manner
exaggerated the picture. He says:
Had they
all been men of marked ability, devoted piety, and
unblemished reputation, the salutary influence they might
have exerted in moulding the character and institutions of
the growing West would have been incalculable. Unhappily,
with two or three shining exceptions, the majority were men
barely of respectable talents, and a few above mediocrity;
and so far from being patterns of flaming zeal and apostolic
devotion, a dull formality seems to have been their general
characteristics (Davidson, History of the Presbyterian
Church is Kentucky).
The
Presbyterian General Assembly, in 1798, describes the existing
condition of the country in these terms:
Formidable
innovations and convulsions in Europe threaten destruction
to morals and religion. Scenes of devastation and bloodshed
unexampled in the history of modern nations have convulsed
the world, and our country is threatened with similar
calamities. We perceive with pain and fearful apprehension a
general dereliction of religious principles and practice
among our fellow citizens, and a visible and prevailing
impiety and contempt for the laws and institutions of
religion, and an abounding infidelity, which in many
instances tends to atheism itself. The profligacy and
corruption of the public morals have advanced with a
progress proportionate to our declension in religion.
Profaneness, pride, luxury, injustice, intemperance,
lewdness, and every species of debauchery and loose
indulgence abound.
There is no
question that throughout the country there was much dull
preaching. Extreme Calvinism had brought coldness and a decline
in religious life. There was some warmth among the Methodists,
which brought their preaching in sharp contrast with some
others. At this time Jesse Lee was their great evangelist. He
began preaching in North Carolina, but was especially drawn to
New England. Dr. Joseph B. Clark, a Congregational historian,
describes him as follows:.
In his
doctrinal teaching, Jesse Lee, the pioneer of Methodism in
these parts, suited such as were of Arminian tendencies; in
his fervent style of address he was acceptable to many warm
hearted Calvinists tired of dull preaching! The wild
enthusiasm of the Quakers had long since dis. appeared, and
their numbers were diminishing. The martyr spirit which
animated the first generation of Baptists had subsided with
the removal of their civil disabilities, and their
religious zeal suffered a proportionate decline. If Jesse
Lee had not come into Massachusetts, some one else pressed
in spirit, like Paul at Athens, "when he saw the city wholly
given to idolatry," would have found utterance, and would
have had followers.
These
conditions affected every section of the country. The condition
of New England is set forth by Lyman Beecher, in 1795, on the
accession of President Dwight to Yale College. He says:
Before he
came the college was in a most ungodly state. The college
church was almost extinct. Most of the students were
skeptical, and rowdies were plenty. Wine and liquors were
kept in many rooms; intemperance, profanity, gambling, and
licentiousness were common. I hardly know how I escaped ....
Boys that dressed flax in the barn, as I used to do, read
Tom Paine and believed him; I read and fought him all the
way. ; never had any propensity to infidelity. But most of
the class before me were infidels, and called each other
Voltaire, D?Alembert, &c. (The Autobiography of Lyman
Beecher, I.).
The religious
condition of Kentucky and Tennessee was particularly deplorable.
Infidel clubs were organized, and their evil influences extended
far and wide. The character of the people was described as:
"Politically they were violent and dogmatic; morally they were
corrupting; and, in respect of religion, they were utterly
infidel." The legislature dispensed with a chaplain, and the
university was turned over to infidel management.
The
autobiography of that famous pioneer preacher, Peter Cartwright,
gives a lively picture of Kentucky society, in 1793, as he
remembered it in his old age. He says:
Logan
county, when my father moved into it, was called "Rogues?
Harbor." Here many refugees from all parts of the Union fled
to escape punishment or justice; for although there was law,
yet it could not be executed, and it was a desperate state
of society. Murderers, horse thieves, highway robbers, and
counterfeiters fled there, until they combined and actually
formed a majority. Those who favored a better state of
morals were called "Regulators." But they encountered fierce
opposition from the "Rogues," and a battle was fought with
guns, pistols, dirks, knives and clubs, in which the
"Regulators" were defeated (Autobiography of Peter
Cartwright).
At this
juncture, when hope was ready to expire, an unlooked for and
an astounding change suddenly took place. The event was the
great revival of 1800, so called for its wide extent and
influence. This extraordinary excitement was called the
revival of 1800 because its remarkable developments occurred
mostly at that date, though its influence covered two or
three years. This revival began in Virginia, but broke out
almost simultaneously in many sections of the country. The
movement originated among and was largely forwarded by the
Presbyterians. In Kentucky the excitement began in the
Presbyterian congregation at Gasper River and extended
thence to the congregations at Muddy and Red river?s, in
Logan county, under the pastoral care of Rev. James
McGready. This James McGready is described as one of the
Sons of Thunder, a Boanerges both in manner and matter, and
an uncompromising reprover of sin in every shape. The curses
of the Law lost none of their severity in falling from his
lips; and, like Mirabeau, the fierceness of his invectives
derived additional terror from the hideousness of his visage
and the thunder of his tones. He had left a congregation in
Orange county, North Carolina, but a few months since, in
consequence of the odium which his unsparing censures had
drawn upon him from the ungodly. Some of his former hearers
having removed to Kentucky, and forwarded him an invitation
to become their pastor, he resolved to accept the call; and
accordingly arrived in the fall of 1796, being now about
thirty-three years of age, and full of fiery zeal
(Davidson).
It was not long
until the effects of his .impassioned preaching were visible.
Regeneration, repentance and faith were his favorite topics; and
an anxious and general concern were awakened among his hearers
on the subject of experimental religion. The language of his
sermons was often lurid. The following extracts from his sermon
on "The Character, History and End of the Fool" will give some
idea of his message:
Time would
fail me to pursue the history of the fool through middle
life, and on to old age. I must pass over a variety of
occurrences in his life; how he obtained the victory over
his conscience; how the Holy Spirit gave him his last call;
and, when this was resisted, how he left him forever; how
the Lord Jesus Christ sealed his heart under the curse, so
that all the powers of heaven and earth could not open it;
how he went on from sin to sin with horrid rapidity, till
his cup of wrath was full to the brim, and he was ripe for
hell. On these particulars I cannot dwell, I would,
therefore, hasten to the end.
And suffice
it to say, he died accursed of God when his soul was
separated from the body, and the black flaming vultures of
hell began to encircle him on every side; his conscience
awoke from its long sleep, and roared like ten thousand
peals of thunder; then all the horrid crimes of his past
life stared him in his face in all their glowing colors;
then the remembrance of misimproved sermons and sacramental
occasions, flared like streams of forked lightning through
his tortured soul; then the reflection that he had slighted
the mercy and blood of the Son of God; that he had despised
and rejected him, was like a poisoned arrow piercing his
heart; when the fiends of hell dragged him into the infernal
gulf he roared and screamed and yelled like a devil; when,
while Indians, Pagans, and Mohametans, stood amazed, and
upbraided him, falling, like Lucifer, from the meridian
blaze of the Gospel and the threshold of heaven, sinking
into the liquid boiling waves of hell, and accursed sinners
of Tyre, and Sidon, and Sodom, and Gomorrah, sprang to the
right and the left, and made way for him to pass them, and
fall lower down even to the deepest caverns in the flaming
abyss?here his conscience, like a never dying worm, stings
him and forever gnaws his soul, and the slightest blood of
the Son of God communicates ten thousand hells in one. Now
through the blazing flames of hell he sees that heaven he
has lost; that exceeding great and eternal weight of glory
he has sold for the devil?s pottage. in those pure regions
he sees his father and mother, his sisters or brothers, and
those persons who sat under the same means of grace with
him, and whom he derided as fools, fanatics and hypocrites.
They are far beyond the impassable gulf; they shine brighter
than the sun when shining in his strength, and walk the
golden streets of the new Jerusalem; but he is lost and
damned forever (The Posthumous Works of the Reverend and
Pious James M?Gready, late Minister of the Gospel in
Henderson, Ky., 148, 149. Nashville, Tenn., 1837).
Under such
preaching as this it is no wonder that men were stirred to the
depths of their souls. Among the means adopted by this zealous
pastor to awaken the flock was a written covenant binding all
who appended their signatures to observe a monthly fast, a
twilight concert of prayer, and a sunrise concert. The year 1799
witnessed a renewal of the excitement, but it reached its height
in 1800 and 1801.
In a letter to
a friend, dated Logan County, Kentucky, October 23, 1801,
M?Gready gives a "Narrative of the Commencement and Progress of
the Revival of 1800." In the interest of historical accuracy,
though a little long, the letter is here recorded, and is as
follows:
But I
promised to give you a short statement of our blessed
revival; on which you will at once say, the Lord has done
great things for us in the wilderness, and the solitary
place has been made glad; the desert has rejoiced and
blossomed as the rose.
In the
month of May, 1797, which was the spring after I came to
this country, the Lord graciously visited Gasper River
Congregation (an infant church then under my charge). The
doctrines of Regeneration, Faith and Repentance,
which I uniformly preached, seemed to call the attention of
the people to a serious inquiry. During the winter the
question was often proposed to me, Is Religion a
sensible thing? If I were converted would I feel it, and
know it? In May, as I said before, the work began.
A woman,
who had been a professor, in full communion with the church,
found her old hope false and delusive?she was struck .with
deep conviction, and in a few days was filled with joy and
peace in believing. She immediately visited her friends and
relatives, from house to house, and warned them of their
danger in a most solemn, faithful manner, and plead with
them to repent and seek religion. This, as a means, was
accompanied with divine blessing to the awakening of many.
About this time the ears of all that congregation seemed to
be open to receive the word preached and almost every sermon
was accompanied with the power of God, to the awakening of
sinners. During the summer, about ten persons in the
congregation were brought to Christ. In the fall of the year
a general deadness seemed to creep on apace. Conviction and
conversion work, in a great measure, ceased; and no visible
alteration for the better took place, until the summer of
1798, at the administration of the sacrament of the supper,
which was in July. On Monday the Lord graciously poured out
his Spirit; a very general awakening took place; perhaps but
a few families in the congregation could be found who, less
or more, were not struck with an awful sense of their lost
estate. During the week following but few persons attended
to worldly business, their attention to the business of
their souls was so great. On the first Sabbath of September,
the sacrament was administered at Muddy Creek (one of my
congregations). At the meeting the Lord graciously poured
forth his spirit, to the awakening of many careless sinners.
Through these two congregations already mentioned, and
through Red River, my other congregation, awakening work
went on with power under every sermon. The people seemed to
hear, for eternity. In every house, and almost in every
company, the whole conversation with people, was about the
state of their souls. About this time the Rev. J. B. came
here, and found a Mr. R. to join him. In a little while he
involved our infant churches in confusion, disputation, &c.,
opposed the doctrines preached here; ridiculed the whole
work of the revival; formed a considerable party, &c., &c.
In a few weeks this seemed to have put a final stop to the
whole work, and our infant congregation remained in a state
of deadness and darkness from the fall, through the winter,
and until the month of July, 1799, at the administration of
the sacrament at Red River. This was a very solemn time
throughout. On Monday, the power of God seemed to fill the
congregation; the boldest, daring sinners in the country
covered their faces and wept bitterly. After the
congregation was dismissed, a large number of the people
stayed about the doors, unwilling to go away. Some of the
ministers proposed to me to collect the people in the
meeting house again, and to perform prayer with them;
accordingly we went in, and joined in prayer and
exhortation. The mighty power of God came amongst us like a
shower from the everlasting hills?God?s people were
quickened and comforted; yea, some of them were filled with
joy unspeakable and full of glory. Sinners were powerfully
alarmed, and some precious souls were brought to feel the
pardoning love of Jesus.
At Gasper
River (at this time under the care of Mr. Rankin, a precious
instrument in the hands of God) the sacrament woo
administered in August. This was one of the days of the son
of Man, indeed, especially on Monday. I preached a plain
gospel sermon on Heb. 11 and 18. The better country. A great
solemnity continued during the sermon. After sermon Mr.
Rankin gave a solemn exhortation-the congregation was then
dismissed; but the people all kept their seats for a
considerable space, whilst awful solemnity appeared in the
countenances of a large majority. Presently several persons
under deep convictions broke forth in a loud outcry?many
fell to the ground and lay powerless, groaning, praying and
crying for mercy. As I passed through the multitude, a
woman, lying in awful distress, called me to her. Said she,
"I lived in your congregation in Carolina; I was a
professor, and often went to the communion; but I was
deceived; I have no religion; I am going to hell." In
another place an old grey headed man lay in an agony of
distress, addressing his weeping wife and children in such
language as this: "We are all going to hell together; we
have lived prayerless, ungodly lives; the work of our souls
is yet to begin; we must get religion, or we will all be
damned." But time would fail me to mention every instance of
this kind.
At Muddy
Creek the sacrament was administered in September. The power
of God was gloriously present on this occasion. The
circumstances of it are equal, if not superior, to those of
Gasper River. Many souls were solemnly awakened; a number,
we hope, converted?whilst the people of God feasted on the
hidden manna, and, with propriety, might be said to sing the
new song. But the year 1800 exceeds all that my eyes ever
beheld on earth. All that I have related is only, as it
were, an introduction. Although many souls in these
congregations, during the three preceding years, have been
savingly converted, and now give living evidences of their
union to Christ; yet all that work is like only to a few
drops before a mighty rain, when compared with the wonders
of Almighty Grace, that took place in the year 1800.
In June,
the sacrament was administered at Red River. This was the
greatest time we had ever seen before. On Monday multitudes
were struck down under awful conviction; the cries of the
distressed filled the whole house. There you might see
profane swearers, and sabbath breakers pricked to the heart,
and crying out, "what shall we do to be saved?" There
frolicers, and dancers crying for mercy. There you might see
little children of ten, eleven and twelve years of age,
praying and crying for redemption, in the blood of Jesus, in
agonies of distress. During this sacrament, and until the
Tuesday following, ten persons we believe, were savingly
brought home to Christ.
In July,
the sacrament was administered in Gasper River Congregation.
Here multitudes crowded from all parts of the country to see
a strange work, from the distance of forty, fifty and even a
hundred miles; whole families came in their wagons; between
twenty and thirty wagons were brought to the place, loaded
with people, and their provisions, in order to encamp at the
meeting house. On Friday, nothing more appeared during the
day, than a decent solemnity. On Saturday, matters continued
in the same way, until in the evening. Two pious women were
sitting together, conversing about their exercises; which
conversations seemed to affect some of the by-standers;
instantly the divine flame spread through the whole
multitude. Presently you might have seen sinners lying
powerless in every part of the house, praying and crying for
mercy. Ministers and private Christians were kept busy
during the night conversing with the distressed. This night
a goodly number of awakened souls were delivered by sweet
believing views of glory, fullness and sufficiency of
Christ, to save to the uttermost. Amongst these were some
children-a striking proof of the religion of Jesus. Of many
instances to which I have been an eye witness, I shall only
mention one, viz., a little girl. I stood by her whilst she
lay across her mother?s lap almost in despair. I was
conversing with her when the first gleam of light broke in
upon her mind?She started to her feet, and in an ecstasy of
joy, she cried out, "O he is willing, he is willing-he is
come, he is come?O what a sweet Christ he is?O what a
precious Christ he is?O what a fullness I see in him?O what
a beauty I see in him?O why was it I never could believe!
that I never could come to Christ before, when Christ was so
willing to save me?" Then turning around, she addressed
sinners, and told them of the glory, willingness and
preciousness of Christ, and plead with them to repent; and
sill this in language so heavenly, and at the same time, so
rational and scriptural, that I was filled with
astonishment. But were I to write you every particular of
this kind that I have been an eye and ear witness to, during
the two past years, it would fill many sheets of paper.
At this
sacrament a great many people from Cumberland, particularly
from Shiloh Congregation, came with great curiosity
to see the work, yet prepossessed with strong prejudices
against it; about five of whom, I trust, were savingly and
powerfully converted before they left the place. A
circumstance worthy of observation, they were sober
professors in full communion. I was truly affected to see
them lying powerless, crying for mercy, and speaking to
their friends and relations, in such language as this: "Oh,
we despised the work we heard of in Logan; but, oh,
we were deceived-I have no religion; I know now that there
is a reality in these things; three days ago I would have
despised any person that would have behaved as I am doing
now; but, oh, I feel the very pains of hell in my soul."
This was the language of a precious soul, just before the
hour of deliverance came. When they went home, their
conversation to their friends and neighbors, was the means
of commencing a glorious work that has overspread all the
Cumberland settlements to the conversion of hundreds of
precious souls. The work continued night and day at this
sacrament, whilst the vast multitude continued upon the
ground till Tuesday morning. According to the best
computation, we believe, that forty-five souls were brought
to Christ on this occasion.
Muddy River
sacrament, in all its circumstances, was equal, and in some
respects superior, to that of Gasper River. This sacrament
was in August. We believe about fifty persons, at this time,
obtained religion.
At Ridge
Sacrament, in Cumberland, the second Sabbath in September,
about forty-five souls, we believe, obtained religion. At
Shiloh Sacrament, the third Sabbath in September, about
seventy persons. At Mr. Craighead?s Sacrament,
congregation, in Logan county, in October, eight
persons. At Little Muddy Creek Sacrament, in November, about
twelve persons. At Montgomery?s Meeting House, in
Cumberland, about forty. At Hopewell Sacrament, in
Cumberland, in November, about twenty persons. To mention
the circumstances of more private occasions, common days
preaching, and societies, would swell a letter to a volume.
The present
season has been a blessed season likewise; yet not equal to
last year in conversion work. I shall just give you a list
of our sacraments, and the number, we believe, experienced
religion at each, during the present year, 1801.
Here follows a
list of the sacraments, and the statement that 144 persons
professed religion. He then continues:
I would
just remark that, among the great numbers in our country
that professed to obtain religion, I scarcely know an
instance of any that gave comfortable ground of hope to the
people of God, that they had religion, and have been
admitted to the privileges of the church, that have in any
degree, disgraced their profession, or given us any ground
to doubt their religion.
Were I to
mention to you the rapid progress of this work, in vacant
congregations, carried on by means of a few supplies and by
praying societies?such as Stone?s River, Cedar Creek, Goose
Creek, the Red Banks, the Fountain Head, and many other
places?it would be more than time, or the bounds of a letter
would admit of. Mr. M?G. and myself administered the
sacrament at the Red Banks, on the Ohio, about a month ago?a
vacant congregation, nearly an hundred miles distant from
any regular organized society, formerly a place famed for
wickedness, and a perfect synagogue of Satan. I visited them
twice at an early period; Mr. R. twice, and Mr. H. once.
These supplies the Lord blessed, as a means to start his
work and their praying societies were attended with the
power of God, to the conversion of almost whole families.
When we administered the sacrament among them, they appeared
to be the most blessed little society I ever saw. I obtained
ten elders among them, all precious Christians; three of
which, two years ago were professed deists, now living
monuments of Almighty Grace.
James M?Gready.
(The
Posthumous Works of James M?Gready, vii-xi).
The first
regular Camp Meeting, as has been seen, was held at Gasper
River, July, 1800. Much pains was taken to advertise the
meeting, and it was announced that people were expected to come
and encamp on the grounds; and the whole community, and
ministers especially, were earnestly invited to attend and
witness the wonderful scene that was anticipated (Methodist
Episcopal Herald, II.). Impelled by curiosity, a great
concourse assembled, from distances as far as one hundred miles.
A regular encampment was formed. Some occupied tents, while
others slept in covered wagons. The whole was arranged to form a
hollow square, the interior of which was fitted up for public
worship. Near the center was the stand, a rude platform or
temporary pulpit, constructed of logs, and surmounted by a hand
rail. The meeting lasted four days and pungent conviction for
sin was followed by relief through faith in Christ.
Barton W.
Stone, then a Presbyterian minister, who was present at this
meeting in Logan county, describes it as follows:
There, on
the edge of a prairie in Logan county, Kentucky, the
multitudes came together and continued a number of days and
nights encamped on the ground, during which time worship was
carried on in some part of the encampment. The scene was new
to me and passing strange. It baffled description. Many,
very many, fell down as men slain in battle, and continued
for hours together in an apparently breathless and
motionless state, sometimes for a few moments reviving and
exhibiting symptoms of life by a deep groan or piercing
shriek, or by a prayer for mercy fervently uttered. After
lying there for hours they obtained deliverance. The gloomy
cloud that had covered their faces seemed gradually and
visibly to disappear, and hope, in smiles, brightened into
joy. They would rise, shouting deliverance, and then would
address the surrounding multitude in language truly eloquent
and impressive. With astonishment did I hear men, women, and
children declaring the wonderful works of God and the
glorious mysteries of the gospel. Their appeals were solemn,
heart-penetrating, bold, and free. Under such circumstances
many others would fall down into the same state from which
the speakers had just been delivered.
Two others
of my particular acquaintances from a distance were struck
down. I sat patiently by one of them, I knew to be a
careless sinner, for hours, and observed with critical
attention everything that passed, from the beginning to the
end. I noticed the momentary revivings as from death. The
humble confession of sin, the fervent prayer, and the
ultimate deliverance; then the solemn thanks and praise to
God, and affectionate exhortation to companions and the
people around to repent and come to Jesus. I was astonished
at the amount of gospel truth displayed in the address. The
effect was that several sank down into the same appearance
of death. After attending to many such cases, my conviction
was complete that it was a good work-the work of God; nor
has my mind wavered since on the subject. Much did I see
then, that I considered to be fanaticism; but this should
not condemn the work. The devil always tries to ape the
works of God, to bring them into disrepute; but that cannot
be a Satanic work which brings men to humble confession, to
forsaking sin, to prayer, fervent praise and thanksgiving,
and a sincere and affectionate exhortation to sinners to
repent and come to Jesus the Saviour.
Camp meetings
once introduced, the plan spread like wild fire. One after
another was held in rapid succession. The woods and paths seemed
alive with people, and the number reported attending is almost
incredible. The laborer quit his task; age snatched his crutch;
youth forgot his pastime; the plow was left in the furrow; the
deer enjoyed a respite in the mountains; business of all kinds
was suspended; dwelling houses were deserted; whole
neighborhoods were emptied; bold hunters and noble matrons,
young women, maidens and little children, flocked to the common
center of attraction; every difficulty was surmounted, every
risk ventured, to be present at the Camp Meeting (McNemar,
History of the Kentucky Revival).
The meetings
were often protracted till two o?clock in the morning.
Everything was done to produce boiling heat, and the "singing
ecstasy" assisted in adding fuel to the fire. The number of
persons who fell is estimated at 3,000. Among the most zealous
advocates of the new measure, were Matthew Houston, Barton W.
Stone and Robert Marshall. These men had always inclined to a
fervent and excited style of preaching, and their peculiarities
had gained them great popularity, and a reputation for
extraordinary zeal. Houston was constitutionally of a warm and
sanguine temperament; Marshall was a bold and stern enthusiast;
Stone differed from them both in cooler sagacity, an appearance
of tender feeling, and a bland, insinuating address; all were
calculated to be leaders, as they equally loved influence and
the stimulus of thronged assemblies. It is not wonderful,
therefore, that, aided by the enthusiasm of the times, they
succeeded in stealing the hearts of the people, even captivating
by great appearance of devotion. To men so predisposed, the Camp
Meeting presented precisely such a theater of operation as they
desired, and everything was accordingly to their purposes.
The
extravagances witnessed under animal feeling were far beyond
anything ever known before and opened a new chapter in the
history of the human mind. They have merited both the attention
of the physician and the psychologist. These bodily exercises
and the new light were of an extraordinary character. The
performances have been divided into seven exercises as follows:
The falling, jerking, rolling, running, dancing, barking, and
visions and trances.
"I have passed
a meeting house," says the eccentric Lorenzo Dow, "where I
observed the undergrowth had been cut for a camp meeting, and
from fifty to an hundred saplings were left breast high on
purpose for persons who were ?jerked? to hold on to. I observed
where they had held on they had kicked up the earth as a horse
stamping flies... I believe it does not affect those naturalists
who wish to get it to philosophize about it; and rarely those
who are the most pious; but the lukewarm, lazy professor is
subject to it. The wicked fear it and are subject to it; but the
persecutors are more subject to it than any, and they have
sometimes cursed and sworn and damned while jerking."
After a rousing
exhortation or during spirited singing, when the body was
exhausted by copious weeping, one or another in the audience,
sometimes to the number of scores, would suddenly fall prostrate
to the ground, and swoon away. No sex or age was exempt; the
young and the old, men as well as women, fell; even large,
robust men, of the age of twenty, and in one instance all who
fell were men. This would be accompanied by piercing shrieks. In
this condition the person would lie from fifteen minutes to
three hours, it is recorded in one instance that a woman did not
eat or speak for nine days. During the syncope, even when
conscious and speaking of religious subjects, the patient was
free from pain.
Swoons and
convulsive fallings have not been without precedent, but what is
known as the jerks was altogether unprecedented in Christian
lands. The person was instantaneously seized with spasms or
convulsions in every muscle, nerve, and tendon. The head was
jerked and thrown from side to side with such rapidity that it
was impossible to distinguish the visage, and the most lively
fears were awakened lest the neck be dislocated or the brains
dashed out. Those who mocked often were stricken down.
Men would
double up with their head and feet together, and roll over and
over like a wheel, or turn swiftly over and over sidewise like a
log. Another would take a sudden start and run with amazing
swiftness as if in a race till his strength was exhausted. The
dancing exercise was a later improvement; "the privilege of
exhibiting by a bold faith, what others were moved to by blind
impulse" (McNemar). The barks frequently accompanied the jerks,
though of later origin. The exercise consisted of an individual
taking the position of a dog, moving about on all fours,
snapping the teeth, and barking, with such exactness of
imitation to deceive any one whose eyes were not directed to the
spot. The persons frequently affected were the most cultivated
and refined. Those affected by trances and who saw visions were
innumerable.
Unfortunately
the greatest disorders accompanied the meetings. "At first
appearance," says McNemar, "these meetings exhibited nothing to
the spectator but a scene of confusion that could scarcely be
put into human language" (McNemar). Mr. Lyle says that "he never
saw a more confused, careless audience since the world began"
(Lyle, Diary). Stone?s people, he says, "were wild and
disorderly more than was needful." No wonder, for Stone was the
ring leader in some of these meetings. While Mr. McPheeters was
preaching Mr. Stone got down on his knees and began to pray,
while the people observing, caught the flame, and began to pray
also. In ten minutes the noise was so great that the preacher
had to cease. They kept up the praying till nine o?clock. The
rest of the congregation left the place in disgust (Lyle).
Meetings of
this character continued for many years, and extended throughout
the entire country. The following description is of a Methodist
meeting in Philadelphia by an eye witness:
I went at 8
o?clock in the evening. The door was locked; but the windows
being open, I placed myself at one of them, and saw that the
church within was crowded almost to suffocation. The
preacher indulged in long pauses, and occasionally of loud
elevations of voice, which were always answered by the
audience with deep groans. When the prayer which followed
the sermon had ended, the minister descended from the
pulpit, the doors were thrown open, and a considerable
number of the audience departed. Understanding, however,
that something was yet to follow, with considerable
difficulty I obtained admission. The minister had departed,
the doors were again closed, but about four hundred persons
remained. One (apparently) of the leading members gave out a
hymn, then a brother was called upon to pray; he roared and
ranted like a maniac; the male part of the audience groaned,
the females shrieked; a man sitting next to me shouted; a
youth standing before me continued for half an hour bawling,
"O Jesus l come down, come down. Jesus t my dear Jesus, I
see you, bless me, O Jesus! Oh! Oh! Oh! come down, Jesus!" A
small space further on, a girl about 11 years of age was in
convulsion: an old woman, whom I concluded was her mother,
stood on a seat, holding her up in her arms, that her
ecstasies might be visible to the whole assembly. In another
place there was a convocation of holy sisters, sending forth
most awful yells... A brother addressed them with a voice
which might almost rival a peal of thunder, the whole
congregation occasionally joining responsive to his notes.
The madness now became threefold increased, and such a scene
presented itself as I could never have pictured to my
imagination, and as I trust, for the honor of true religion
and of human nature, I shall never see again. Had the
inhabitants of Bedlam been let loose, they could not have
exceeded it. From forty to fifty were praying aloud and
extemporaneously at the same moment of time; some were
kicking, many jumping, all clapping their hands, and crying
out in chorus, Glory (Fearson, Narrative of a Journey).
There were not
sufficient salutary influences thrown around these meetings, it
is certain. Davidson says of the meetings in Kentucky:
The late
hours that were kept no doubt aided the tendency to a morbid
excitement of the nervous system. They continued up,
sometimes till two, sometimes till four o?clock in the
morning. It was no uncommon thing to spend the whole night
in these orgies. To compensate for this loss of sleep, they
would deliberately spread their great coats and take a nap
during the sermon. The truth seems to be, that there were no
regular hours for anything, nor regular intermissions for
eating and sleeping; there were no stated hours for public
worship, and the meeting might be said to last day and
night. Cooking, eating, sleeping and the like processes,
were all going on simultaneously with the religious
services.
Tradition
whispers in an undertone of wild fellows from adjoining towns
frequenting the camp to take advantage of the opportunities
afforded by the prevailing license and disorder, just as they
would at a masquerade. That dissolute characters of both sexes
resorted thither can easily be gathered from those who have
written upon the revival.
The question
has been raised by earnest and serious men, did the revival do
more good than harm? That there were evil results that came from
it is beyond doubt. Aside from any disorderly elements which may
be mentioned, there were sown doctrinal differences and schisms
which have not been healed to this day. Out of the revival came
acrimonious debates and criticisms which have not been easy to
allay. There can be no question that there were numbers of
genuine conversions. It slew infidelity in Kentucky. Dr. George
A. Baxter, an eminent Presbyterian minister and President of
Washington Academy, came to Kentucky to look into the effects of
the revival. His report was most favorable: He says:
On my way
to Kentucky I was informed by settlers on the road that the
character of Kentucky travelers was entirely, changed; that
they were now as remarkable for sobriety as they had
formerly been for dissoluteness and immorality. And, indeed,
I found Kentucky, to appearances, the most moral place I had
ever seen. A profane expression was hardly ever heard. A
religious awe seemed to pervade the country; and some
deistical characters had confessed that, from whatever cause
the revival might proceed, it made the people better. Its
influence was not less visible in promoting a friendly
temper among the people .... Some neighborhoods visited by
the revival were formerly notorious for private animosities
and contentions; and many petty lawsuits had commenced on
that ground. When the parties in these quarrels were
impressed with religion, the first thing was to send for
their antagonists, and it was often very affecting to see
their meeting. They had both seen their faults, and both
contended they ought to make the acknowledgement, till at
last they were obliged to request one another to forbear all
mention of the past, and to receive each other as friends
and brothers for the future (Baxter, The Great Revival in
Kentucky, The Connecticut Evangelical Magazine, II.
354. March, 1802, Hartford).
Dr. Richard
Furman, of South Carolina, was more conservative in his
statement. In a letter which he wrote to Dr. Rippon, London,
England, he says:
I hope the
direct good obtained from these meetings will much more than
counterbalance the incidental evil (Benedict, History of
the Baptists, II.).
The
extravagances above related and illustrated prevailed among the
Presbyterians and with such assistance as the Methodists could
afford. The Baptists profited greatly by the revival, but had
little or no connection with the excitement. Lewis Collins, the
historian of Kentucky, relates:
The
Baptists almost entirely escaped these extraordinary and
disgraceful scenes produced by the jerks, the rolling and
barking exercises, etc., which extensively obtained among
some other persuasions of those days. The work among the
Baptists was deep, solemn and powerful; but comporting with
that decency so emphatically enjoined by the scriptures
(Collins, Historical Sketches of Kentucky).
The Baptists
were great gainers by the revival and multitudes were added to
the churches. "This great revival (among the Baptists) in
Kentucky," says Benedict, "began in Boone county on the Ohio
River, and in its progress extended up the Ohio, Licking and
Kentucky rivers, branching out into the settlements adjoining
them. It spread fast in different directions, and in a short
time almost every part of the State was affected by its
influence. It was computed that about ten thousand were baptized
and added to the Baptist churches in the course of two or three
years. This great work progressed among the Baptists in much
more regular manner than people abroad generally supposed. They
were indeed zealously affected, and much engaged. Many of their
ministers baptized in a number of neighboring churches from two
to four hundred each. And two of them baptized about five
hundred each in the course of the revival. But throughout the
whole they preserved a good degree of decorum and order"
(Benedict, II.).
Collins gives a
good deal of detailed information on this point. He says:
"During the revival, large additions were made to the churches
in every quarter of the State. The Elkhorn Association, at its
annual meeting in 1801, reported an addition of 3,011
members by baptism during the current year; and in 1802, an
accession of twelve churches was reported, making the whole
number of members 5,300." To the South Kentucky, the accessions
were almost equal to those of the Elkhorn Association. "The
Tate?s Creek Association reported in 1801, the addition of 1,148
members by baptism, The Salem Association also shared largely in
the blessings of the revival. It received upwards of 2,000
members."
Dr. Spencer,
the Kentucky Baptist historian, thus sums up the situation:
"Among the Baptists in Northern Kentucky, where they were by far
the most numerous, the revival began, and continued to its
close, in a decorous, orderly manner. In the upper Green River
country and East Tennessee, where the Separate Baptists were
most numerous, there was more excitement, and some falling
and jerking. In Middle Tennessee (then called West
Tennessee), ?the strange exercises? did not prevail among the
Baptists. In the lower Green River country, there were but few
Baptists at the beginning of the revival, and we hear of no
disorder among them. It is certain that the Baptists of Kentucky
were generally exempt from the excesses of the great revival of
1800, that so sorely afflicted the Presbyterians. And instead of
it resulting an discord, it healed the only schism there was
among them.
"The revival
had an especially happy effect on the Baptists, in disposing
them to make more efforts to heal some unhappy divisions that
existed among them, and in enlarging the spirit of missions.
Hitherto their missionary operations had been confined to
sending their ministers to look after their destitute brethren
in Kentucky, and in the adjacent borders of Tennessee, Indiana
and Ohio. But, in 1801, at the meeting of the Elkhorn
Association, which comprised one-third of the Baptists in the
State, and probably more than two-thirds of their wealth and
influence, a request came up from the South Elkhorn. church, ?to
send missionaries to the Indian nations"? (Spencer, History
of Kentucky Baptists, I.).
The revival
was, however, not confined to this section, but extended to
every part of the Union. To the Minutes of the Georgia
Association for 1803, Jesse Mercer appended the following
note:
Doubtless
there is a glorious revival of the religion of Jesus. The
wicked of every description have been despoiled of their
boasted coat of mail; even deists, who stood in the front of
the battle, have had their right arm broken, their hopes
disappointed, and their prognostications metamorphosed into
falsehood. As the fruit of this work there have been added
to the churches of the Georgia Association, more than
1,400; to those of the Sarepta, more than 1,000 a year ago,
and we doubt not that number has greatly increased by this
time (actually 375 had been added to the Sarepta during
1803; while for the years 1801, 1802, and 1803, there were
added to the churches of the Sarepta Association, 1,803 by
baptism). To those of Bethel (a South Carolina Association)
more than 2,000. There is and continues a great work in some
of the churches in the Hephzibah and Savannah
(Associations), and is kindly in others. More than one
hundred have been added to one church in the
Charleston Association. We are authorized to say that, in
six Associations in Kentucky, there are at least 10,000
young converts. To all of which we add that other
accounts from different distant parts, verbally received,
state that the Lord is doing excellent things in the earth.
There was a
great awakening in the First Baptist Church, of Boston, under
the pastoral care of Samuel Stillman. In the Baptist Magazine
of 1804-5 this work is thus described:
A special
seriousness made its appearance in both Baptist churches
early in 1803. Its first indications were a solemn
stillness, and a deep, fixed attention on the Sabbath. The
work gradually continued to extend from week to week,
through two or three years.
It has been
unusual, during the fall, winter and spring months, while
the evenings were sufficiently long, for the people to tarry
after the blessing, and frequently some minister present has
again addressed them. Sometimes two or three have spoken and
prayed. The custom seems to arise out of the feelings of the
people. They appeared loth to leave the place. There is no
doubt that they would have tarried until midnight, had the
exhortations been continued. The number gathered into the
First Church was 127; into the second, 185. Although these
two societies have been the principal sharers in this work
it has not been confined to them. Persons from almost every
society in town, and numbers from adjacent towns, have
frequently attended on our lectures; and we have reason to
believe that many have reaped saving advantages.
The work
was still, and without confusion. The gospel preached was
principally blessed, almost everything seemed to preach. The
converts generally had a deep sense of the depravity of
their own hearts; of the infinite evil of sin, as committed
against a holy God. It reclaimed the profane swearer, the
gambler, and the Sabbath breaker. It made the young men
sober minded.
Great revivals
were experienced throughout New England. Bennett Tyler says:
Within a
period of five or six years, commencing with 1797, not less
than one hundred and fifty churches in New England were
visited with "times of refreshing from the presence of the
Lord" (Tyler, New England Revivals).
Ebenezer
Porter, Professor in Andover Theological Seminary says:
The day
dawned which was to succeed a night of more than sixty
years. As in the valley of Ezekiel?s vision, there was a
great shaking. Dry bones, animated by the breath of the
Almighty, stood up new born believers. The children of Zion
beheld with overflowing souls, and with thankful hearts
acknowledged "this is the finger of God." The work was
stamped conspicuously with the impress of the Divine author,
and its joyful effects no other than the agency of
Omnipotence.
Edward D. Grin
says:
I could
stand in my door at New Hartford, Litchfield county,
Connecticut, and number fifty or sixty contiguous
congregations laid down in one field of Divine
wonders, and as many more in different parts of New England
(Sprague, Lectures on Revivals, Appendix).
The Cayuga
Association, New York, reported, in 1802, that every church in
the Association received additions to their number.
There were many
notable conversions. Among this number was Samuel Mills who had
much to do with the beginning of missionary operations in this
country (American Quarterly Register, 1840, I. 346).
"Taken altogether the revival period at the close of the last
(eighteenth) century and the beginning of the present
(nineteenth) furnishes ample materials for a long and glorious
chapter in the history of redemption" (Humphrey, Revival
Sketches). This revival brought on the great missionary era
among Baptists.
Books for
further reference:
McNemar,
History of the Kentucky
Revival.
Sprague,
Lectures on Revivals o/ Religion. Boston, 1835.
Porter,
Letters on Religious Revivals about the Beginning of the Present
Century. Boston, 1858.
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