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href="#ulink_6f51aa3b-ca61-545d-a65f-8b3ced00dc8e">28 According to James I. Good, a wave of revival spread over the German Reformed Church from 1828 to 1844.29 The “Annual Report” of 1843, the year that Nevin wrote the first edition of his Anxious Bench, refers to revivals in many of the German Reformed congregations:

      We may identify several distinctive features of the Second Great Awakening which, in time, shaped answers to the Church Question. First, the revival preachers of the Second Great Awakening effectively utilized protracted camp or tent meetings. In time, the apparent success of these meetings encouraged local congregations to try similar tactics in their sanctuaries. Second, rather than waiting for the Lord to work in the hearts of those who heard their messages, as had been done by the preachers in the First Great Awakening, the preachers of the Second Great Awakening induced responses through specialized techniques. In time, the apparent success of new measures, like the “anxious bench,” encouraged settled pastors to add them to their evangelistic tool box and employ them in their sanctuaries. Third, the Second Great Awakening encouraged a national move from the Calvinism of Whitefield and Edwards to Arminianism. This move is most evident in the rise of Methodism in America, but is also evident in the number of notable individuals, such as Barton Stone and Charles Finney, who rejected their Calvinistic roots and embraced decisionist techniques. Fourth, the Second Great Awakening stirred up a vision for missionary work and social reform, each made possible by the rise of voluntary societies. These new endeavors organized the forces of like-minded individuals towards the accomplishment of specific goals—and did so outside of the jurisdiction of local congregations and national denominations. As Mark Noll catalogues, during this time period

      Republicanism

      Sidney Mead was one of the first historians to draw attention to the influence of republicanism on the American church. His discussion of “The Rise of the Evangelical Conception of the Ministry in America” describes how the general conception of the faith was transformed as the church adapted to the unprecedented challenges of religious freedom and the separation of Church and State:

      Through his research, Mead also discovered that the role of the pastor was transformed from a priestly model to an evangelical model. In other

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