Jonathan Edwards and The Great Awakening

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Jonathan Edwards and The Great Awakening Honors American Literature

Transcript of Jonathan Edwards and The Great Awakening

Jonathan Edwards and The Great Awakening

Honors American Literature

The Great Awakening

The First Great Awakening •  Puritanism was in decline in the early

1700s •  The First Great Awakening began

around 1720 •  It was a spiritual renewal in the colonies •  Thousands converted to other Protestant

groups at this time •  Traditional Puritanism was not revived

Jonathan Edwards

•  Born in East Windsor, CT

•  Went to Yale at 13 – valedictorian

•  M.A. in theology •  Grandfather

Solomon Stoddard also a preacher

Jonathan Edwards, cont.

• Edwards was very orthodox and fervent

• Dismissed from his congregation in 1750 because of conservatism and alienation

• Was president of what is now Princeton University

“Sinners in the Hands of an Angry God”

• According to one account, Edwards used a level and calm voice during the sermon

• People reportedly groaned and screamed in terror

•  This is his most famous sermon

Word Size = Word Frequency

Literary Terms and Vocabulary

Sermon

• A speech given from a pulpit in a (Protestant) house of worship

• Expresses an author’s message or point of view

• Can be inspiring or instructional

Sermons v. Homilies • Priests deliver homilies based on

the gospel reading of the day; they intend to explain the meaning of the gospel

• Pastors develop themes for their sermons and support their preaching with scripture verses

Simile • Figurative language which compares two unlike things using like, as or than

Metaphor • Figurative language that directly compares two unlike things

Personification • Figurative Language in which objects are given human characteristics

Omnipotent (adj) • All-powerful

Ineffable (adj) •  Inexpressible;

unable to be spoken

Dolorous (adj) • Sad;

mournful

Abhors (v) • To detest;

loathe