Abstract
American Protestants in the early nineteenth century faced intellectual and social challenge which made conspicuous the weakness of their own divided condition. The American Revolution—which was part of a larger upheaval in the Atlantic Community—had spread Enlightenment ideas, with their aggressive attack on orthodoxy. Quite typical was the lament of a convention of Massachusetts Congregational ministers in 1799 over “the present decay of Christian morals and piety, and the awful prevalence of speculative and practical infidelity.” Well before the middle eighteen-thirties the tide of deism had ebbed, but some, like the editors of the new Christian Review, were still building sea walls against it.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Religious studies,History,Cultural Studies
Reference70 articles.
1. A Connecticut Liberal (Chicago, 1942).
2. Christian Review, I (1836), pp. 7–10.
Cited by
5 articles.
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