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Because it gave people the determination to better their lives and improve society as a whole

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Who were the popular revivalists of the Second Great Awakening?

horace mann


Where did the second great awakening derived its religious strength?

The Second Great Awakening derived its religious strength from the popular preaching of evangelical revivalists in both the West and eastern cities.


When did the second great awakening end?

The Second Great Awakening was in decline by the 1830s.


What did the second great awakening inspire people to do rearding slavery?

what did the second great awakening inspire


When did the second great awakening begin?

The Second Great Awakening began around 1790 in the United States.


What did the second great awakening cause?

The second great awakening caused shifts in theology and in religious beliefs


What was the second great awakening?

The second great awakening was a religious revival in America. There were camp meetings. The abolitionist movement and the temperance movement were influenced by the Second Great Awakening.


Who was the most popular preacher of the second great awakening?

Charles G. Finney was the most influential preacher of the Second Great Awakening. He preached in New York State and eventually became the president of Oberlin College in Ohio.


Why was the second awakening so popular?

The second great awakening so popular due to the fact that religion had been made tepid by Diests and Chauncey. Most people were educated and felt the need for a change of the traditional Christian beliefs.


Who opposed the second great awakening?

The southern states because the Second Great Awakening promoted the abolitionist movement.


The tendency toward rationalism and indifference in religion was reversed about 1800 by the?

probably the revivalist movement called the Second Great Awakening


Reform movement from second great awakening?

There are several reform movements associated with the Second Great Awakening including the women's rights movement, and abolitionism. The Second Great Awakening refers to a Protestant revival movement.