Help strengthen alternative media by visiting our supporters

Sheepdog Supplies

A Divided Country – Will We Have Another Awakening?

Americans are leaving organized religion behind

A Divided Country

A Divided Country

Will We Have Another Awakening?

If my people, which are called by my name, shall humble themselves, and pray, and seek my face, and turn from their wicked ways; then will I hear from heaven, and will forgive their sin, and will heal their land.” -2 Chronicles 7:14

By Bob Shillingstad

There have been many observers who have made the comparison that our country has never been more divided since the Civil War.   The split politically in 1856 was deep because of slavery. There was a miniature Civil War in Kansas between abolitionists and pro-slavery southerners. By the end of the year, over 200 people had been killed in what was called “Bleeding Kansas”. Massachusetts Senator Charles Sumner was attacked in the U. S. Senate by a Southern House member, was nearly killed and never fully recovered from his injuries.

The Whig Party had no direction after the election of 1856. The Republican Party was anti-slavery and came into prominence while the Democrats, who were dominated by the South and were the pro-slavery party, suffered as a result. In March of 1857, the Supreme Court issued the Dred Scott decision; this effectively threw out any compromises and allowed the practice of slavery to spread throughout the country.

Then, in 1857, came the financial panic that overwhelmed the country.  Newspapers at the time observed that bank failures  “caused a rapid and unprecedented decline in the stocks and securities”. Much of the speculative wealth of the nation was swept away as banks failed and railroads went into bankruptcy.  Factories were shut down, merchants went out of business, thousands were thrown out of work, including 30,000 in New York alone. 

These are just the highlights of the division in1857 prior to the outbreak of war. The Dred Scott decision was the catalyst that doomed us to a civil war. Does anything sound familiar? We were a country divided politically, geographically and culturally. 

In the past, revivals or “awakenings” had brought our country together.  Dr. Eddie Hyatt has written extensively about the three “Great Awakenings.”   He said for a revival to be called a Great Awakening, it should have three characteristics: 

  1. It is an obvious sovereign work of God in that it has arisen apart from any identifiable human plan, strategy or design.
  2. It is non-sectarian and touches people of all sects and denominations. No one group, or church, can “own” the revival.
  3. It is not localized or regional but has an obvious national impact on the nation and its culture”.

The first “Great Awakening” revival began about 1730 and united the colonies under the preaching of George Whitfield, John Wesley and others.  But when the Revolutionary War began, only about a third of the population were patriots and an equal number were Tories or loyal to the King. The remainder of the population didn’t take a stand.  Many historians believe there would not have been a revolution nor would we have the government we have without this awakening.

The second Great Awakening took place in the early nineteenth century, west of the Appalachian mountains in what was then called “The lawless west.” Circuit riders came into that area and the lower Ohio River valley and conducted many camp meetings. As a result, the revival quickly spread to other regions and into Canada.  The history of this revival is amazing. Even today, this area including, Kentucky, Tennessee and West Virginia, is still known as the “Bible Belt”.

Now we go back to 1857 and the final, “Great Awakening” in America. It starts with Jeremiah Lamphier, who was a forty-six-year-old businessman and layman who had become a home missionary with the Dutch Reformed Church.  For three months, Jeremiah had gone downtown to every business, shop and boardinghouse, inviting people to church because many people had moved out of the cities and this was considered an “unchurched” area.  He was having little success but on that particular Wednesday, September 23, 1857, he invited everyone to come to a prayer meeting over the noon hour.  It was 12:10 and still no one had come. Finally at 12:30 five men walked in to pray. There was no fanaticism, no hysteria. From a human perspective, nothing extraordinary was happening. Just six men quietly, earnestly seeking God on behalf of their city. The next Wednesday, 14 people attended the prayer meeting. Within six month there were anywhere from 10,000 to 30,000 men and women out of a population of 80,000 praying at 20 different prayer meetings daily around NYC.

The format of the prayer meeting was simple. At noon, promptly, the leader of the meeting would open with one or two verses of a well-known hymn, give an opening prayer and then read any prayer requests.  After just a few requests, anyone was then free to pray, share a prayer request or give a testimony.  There were no sermons and there was a five-minute limit on speaking.  The emphasis of the meeting was on the conversion of the lost and most of the prayers were directed to that end. The meeting was dismissed promptly at 1:00 PM with a concluding prayer by the leader. Prayer meetings spread up the East Coast to New Haven, Boston, Philadelphia and into New Jersey. Going west, they spread to Chicago, St. Louis, Cleveland, Detroit, Minneapolis, Omaha and throughout the South.  They were responsible for revivals in Ireland, Wales and other countries.  It is estimated that as many as two million souls were brought to a saving knowledge of Christ.

Why is this story relevant to us today?  What’s the lesson? Jeremiah Lamphier was not a man of exceptional talent. But he believed in a big God!  This revival extended to the North and South but sadly, it didn’t stop the Civil War or the deaths of 600,000 Americans in the worst fighting of this country’s history.  

What was the purpose of this move of God?  The effects of this terrible conflict could have been a permanent division of our country or at the very least one part of our country that was in a permanent state of despair.  But we did recover from this conflict and although it was not an easy process, we emerged as one united nation, stronger and more resolved to equality than ever before. It prepared a future nation with the same ideals fulfilled.

Dr. Hyatt (eddiehyatt.com)  summarized this so well when he said, “America is now facing another great crisis, perhaps even more daunting than the Civil War. This is because the moral and religious pillars of support that were in place at that time have been removed.”  This column is not a call to “vote the rascals out” or find a political solution to our problems because they are deeper than that.  Dr. Erwin Lutzer, in his book When A Nation Forgets God, states that, “God is humbling us. The political solution that we thought would rescue our nation from its moral and spiritual problems is deeper than we thought, thus the solution itself must be deeper still.  In sum, we must realize that only God can save us from those trends that have already evoked His judgement.”

We often read that verse from 2 Chronicles and think that God is some kind of celestial servant or and that we can automatically turn our country around. Salvation is not a “group effort” but begins with each of us changing and repenting. The Wall Street Journal recently reported that Americans continue to leave the faith behind. According to Pew Research, the percentage of American Christians has fallen about 12% over the last ten years, from 75% in 2011 to around 63% today. The number who pray every day is even lower, at 45%. The demographic rising in its place are the so-called “nones,” those who identify religiously as “nothing in particular.” This group grew to about 20% of the US population in 2021, up from 16% in 2017. 

The surprising thing here isn’t that Americans are leaving organized religion behind. That’s been happening at about the same rate for a while now. However, it is newsworthy that this trend continued unabated in the face of a global pandemic. Historically, catastrophic events that bring uncertainty, stress, or political chaos tend to draw people to reconsider faith in record numbers.  On a purely pragmatic level, this is bad news. Study after study suggests that church attendance corresponds with lower rates of substance abuse, divorce, incarceration, and depression, not to mention higher levels of meaning and satisfaction, volunteering, longevity, and civic engagement. Given that we are in one of the loneliest eras in recent memory, why aren’t Americans back in church? Can each of us be a Jeremiah Lampier, praying and sharing our faith.

The revival had begun with a simple layman who did not claim any special gift or calling  and the revival continued apart from the guidance of the ordained clergy, much like the early church, which knew of no formal distinction between “laity” and a professional “clergy”. One interesting footnote to this story is that the World Trade Center, before it was attacked, was built directly on the site of that church where this prayer revival began. Maybe we should add a reminder of the Prayer Revival there —-our “Ebenezer”.

 

Don Bradway contributed to this publication

The views, opinions, or positions expressed by the authors and those providing comments are theirs alone, and do not necessarily reflect the views, opinions, positions of Redoubt News. Social Media, including Facebook, has greatly diminished distribution of our content to our readers’ newsfeeds and is instead promoting Main Stream Media sources. This is called ‘Shadow-banning’. Please take a moment and consider sharing this article with your friends and family. Thank you. Please support our coverage of your rights. Donate here

3 Comments on A Divided Country – Will We Have Another Awakening?

  1. People are waking up. Waking up to the fact that religion and it’s adherents are hypocritical. You build up your churches and tell the people to come. You preach hellfire and damnation to the very “sinners” you seek to “save”. You tell the people in your pews they deserve hell for their life of sin. You pretend that this country belongs to the religious few, while forgetting that we have freedom of religion, or no religion at all. The Christian’s don’t own this country any more or less than the Muslims, the Buddhists, or any other religion. You speak as if you are above reproach when in reality you are no better. If you want your religion to reach people, stop preaching against sin and start showing grace. Stop expecting people to fill your pews, and go meet them where they are at. Lift them up from their current darkness! It won’t happen tho, there is no profit in it, so you will continue to build your houses of worship, pretending you matter, when I’m all reality you are forgotten behind the four walls of your church, and society will find a way to move on, without you!!

  2. Founder John Adams once said that our Constitution was made only for a moral and religious people…I have looked into myself and asked, am I a responsible, moral person ?…Can I act in faith rather than out of crass cynical motive ?….Do I deserve liberty ?

  3. I don’t think we will be seeing another spiritual awakening again this time. At least not until we have had to endure God’s judgement first.

Comments are closed.