Monday, July 29, 2019

1/ 1725► 1st Great Awakening

 
Commonly called “The Great Awakening” this was certainly not 
the greatest revival in numerical growth or geographical scope. 
Nevertheless, it well deserves the title because it was the first 
discernible occasion that God’s Spirit was outpoured 
simultaneously across different nations. 

Historically, the beginning of this awakening can be traced to 
the Moravian community called “Herrnhut” (the Lord’s watch), 
where a visitation from God was experienced after 
a period of prayer, repentance and reconciliation in 1727. 

Nikolas Count Ludwig Von Zinzendorf, a German, was the leader of 
the movement that began a 24 hour-a-day prayer meeting, 
which lasted the next 100 years. In the next 65 years that small 
community sent out 300 radical missionaries. 

Their revived German Pietism was destined to influence two other 
harvest fields, which were on God’s agenda for that time - England and 
America. Griffith Jones, a young Anglican clergyman, often called the
 ‘morning star of the revival,’ was making a mark in Britain through 
his revival preaching for at least 10 years before Theodore 
Frelinghuysen, a Dutch reformed Pietist, began 
to see remarkable conversions in America. 

He preached in 1727 with revival signs following 
his ministry in New Jersey. The revival spread to the 
Scottish-Irish Presbyterians under the 
ministry of Gilbert Tennant, whose father, William, founded the 
famous “Log College”, which later became the Princeton University.

 Revival then spread to the Baptists of Pennsylvania and Virginia 
before the extraordinary awakening that occurred on Northampton, Massachusetts, under the ministry of Jonathan Edwards in 1734. 
 Edward’s personal experience of revivals and his sharp mind 
enabled him to produce a number of revival theologies and 
pastoral observations, which have yet to be surpassed 
in their wisdom and insight. 

Thereafter, the revival spread to England and was further 
advanced in America by a visit of George Whitefield in 1739. 
The effects of the revival were phenomenal. 
Statistics are hard to find, but we know that 150 new 
Congregational churches began in a 20-year period and 
30,000 were added to the church between 1740 and 
1742, probably doubling its size. 

 Moral results were equably noticeable. 
Nine university collegeswere established in the colonies. 
The wild frontier society was thoroughly Christianised. 
 Early missionary desire began to emerge, most notably in 
the ministry of David Brainerd among the Indians.
 His journals are essential reading for all those seeking revival. 

Back in Britain a massive movement of revival had began and 
was bound up with the ministries of two young men, George 
Whitefield and John Wesley. Both had been members of 
the Holy Club in Oxford while they were students.

Wesley went off, still unconverted, to America to preach to 
the Indians in 1736, returning in 1738. The only benefit of 
this venture was his contact with the Moravians, who he could not 
understand, but for whom he had a great respect. 

On Wesley’s return, Whitefield had been converted and was already 
preaching with great effect. For 34 years he exercised a most 
amazing preaching ministry, with revival signs often following him. 
His eloquence was commanding and convincing, full of vivid 
pictures and graphic expressions. “His hearers were taken by 
surprise and carried by storm” (J C Ryle). 

The height of Whitefield’s ministry was at the famed Cambuslang 
Awakening in 1742, when 20,000 and 30,000 people gathered to hear 
him preach, followed by mass weeping and repentance for 1½ hours. 
During Whitefield’s ministry he preached in almost every town of 
England, Scotland and Wales, crossing the Atlantic seven times; 
winning countless souls in Boston, New York and Philadelphia. 

He publicly preached an estimated 18,000 power-packed 
messages, although none of his 75 recorded sermons do 
justice to his style and delivery. 
Whitefield’s friend, John Wesley, must go down in history 
as the architect of the 18th century evangelical revival. 
Converted in 1738, at the well-known Aldersgate Street 
prayer meeting, he proceeded to preach whenever the 
opportunity afforded itself, usually in church. 

Then, in 1739, at Whitefield’s request, he preached in the open 
air at Bristol and followed Whitefield in his preaching places. 
There began those unusual manifestations, which periodically 
attended his and Whitefield’s ministry; falling, crying out, 
fainting, shrieking, convulsions etc. 

Wesley wisely began small societies designed for mutual encouragement and support. These became forerunners of the class-meetings and then 
of the Methodist Church. They were surely used to conserve the fruits of his revivalistic work. Wesley was an itinerant preacher for 65 years. 
He travelled an estimated 250,000 miles on horseback to 
preach 40,000 sermons! He wrote 233 books, including his 
voluminous journals and a complete 
commentary on the whole bible. 

 He left behind him 750 preachers in England, 350 in America; 
76, 968 Methodists in England and 57,621 in America. 
With Charles, his brother, he penned 9,000 hymns. 
Wesley’s influence has far outrun his long life. His practices and
 theology has affected Holiness, Revivalist, Pentecostal and 
Charismatic groups right down to the present day.

 Clearly, then this Awakening was truly ‘Great’ and had notable 
affect on the majority of countries where Evangelical Christians 
could be found. It affected the existing church, saw thousands 
converted and impacted social conditions. 
Historians usually refer to 1766, the year of the 
American Revolution, as the year by which the
 revival had spent itself and had began to decline.

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