Colonial America: The Great Awakening | 5-Minute Videos | PragerU
Before the American Revolution in 1776, there was another revolution decades earlier. This one wasn’t about freedom vs. tyranny, but about something else entirely, and it changed the face of the developing nation almost as profoundly as the War of Independence did. Thomas Kidd, author of American History Volumes 1 and 2, tells the story.
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Transcript:
Colonial America: The Great Awakening
Presented by Thomas Kidd
The first American revolution didn’t happen in 1776. It happened nearly fifty years earlier.
And it wasn’t about politics; it was about religion.
We know it as the Great Awakening, and it changed America almost as profoundly as the War of Independence did.
By the 1730s, the American colonies had achieved a permanency — that is, they were now a fixture on the global landscape. With more and more European settlers arriving every year, the future looked bright. To some, and to one clergyman in particular, the new prosperity came at a steep price.
That clergyman was Jonathan Edwards, the fiery and brilliant pastor of Northampton Congregationalist Church in Massachusetts. Edwards was disturbed by what he saw as his parishioners’ complacency. It wasn’t enough for them to show up in church on Sunday, he asserted.
They needed a personal relationship with God, something that could not be mediated by clergy. God’s grace alone, not religious ritual, would save them from the fires of Hell. “…If we improve our lives to any other purpose, than as a journey toward heaven, all our labour will be lost.”
Edwards’s message struck a chord. Within a year, almost every resident of his frontier town professed to be, as the New Testament puts it, “born again.”
It was the beginning of evangelical Christianity in America.
If Edwards kindled a new religious fervor, it was George Whitefield who fanned it into a bonfire. Whitefield was born in England in 1714. Although he studied philosophy and theology at Oxford University, he never took a permanent pulpit. Instead, he traveled from town to town as a preacher, first in England and then in the colonies.
A naturally gifted orator and an incredibly hard worker, Whitefield attracted mind-boggling crowds — 20,000 in Boston (at a time when it had a population of 17,000) and 25,000 in Philadelphia, to cite just two examples. People would travel long distances, often walking or riding for days to hear him speak.
All this attention made him America’s first true celebrity.
It also connected Whitefield to an ambitious printer and future celebrity himself, Benjamin Franklin. Franklin saw an opportunity for a major windfall in publishing Whitefield’s works, while Whitefield saw an opportunity to get his message out to even more Americans.
Both were right. Franklin made a fortune, and Whitefield made more converts. The Great Awakening was fundamentally a spiritual event. But it also had profound political consequences. The quintessentially American idea of religious liberty took shape during this period. Before the Great Awakening, American religious practices were tightly regulated by the government. Pastors generally did not have the freedom to start new churches or preach wherever they wished. But the Awakening’s popularity and its focus on the individual’s relationship with God overwhelmed these restrictions.
It also stirred the first inklings of revolution. If you could rebel against the established church, you could rebel against the Crown.
But the Great Awakening did even more than that. It shaped America’s pre-Revolutionary culture. Not only did it increase biblical literacy throughout the colonies, it also rooted America in a Judeo-Christian worldview. For example, Franklin and Thomas Jefferson, perhaps the two least doctrinaire of the Founders, wanted the seal of the United States to feature Moses leading the Israelites out of Egypt under the motto “Rebellion to tyrants is obedience to God.”
When noted patriot Patrick Henry exhorted his Virginia colleagues to embrace the cause of revolution in his 1775 “Liberty or Death” oration, he used Biblical language to do it. He declared that “An appeal to arms and to the God of hosts is all that is left us.” His audience, reared during the Great Awakening, understood that kind of talk.
So did Jefferson, who used religious language to capture the sacred spirit of liberty in the Declaration of Independence: “all men are created equal… [and are] endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights… among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness.”
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The Power of The Word
Another wonderful video about our great country…thanks PragerU!
Ever wonder why these videos are made as advertisements? Almost like they are Westernized Christian propaganda.
I think it should be obvious to all American Christians that God Himself lit the fire of the Great Awakening to prepare the people in the colonies for the American Revolution.
Governor. William Leet in 1650 used to hide Calvinist from the British and started religious freedom in our country.
My great grandfather was the first governor of the colony of Connecticut in 1650 in Guildford. Our family fought way before the Civil War and why didn’t you talk about Simeon Leet who held off almost 100 British soldiers from behind a rock before they shot him
Religion does not belong in Politics, which the First Amendment came later
Corporations should pay taxation because original point of taxation was to tax and US constitution that is for the people and by the people must protect our constitutional right from Corporations.
Capitalism because same as socialism and communism when government doesn't protect us
3:29 Be already rebelled against the established church, back in 1517
Whitfield would be rolling in his grave if he took a walk through Northampton, Massachusetts today. It is one of the most woke communities within one of the most woke states in the country. The only religion left in there is wokeism.
Prof. Thomas Kidd's book The Great Awakening: The Roots of Evangelical Christianity in Colonial America (Yale University Press) is one of the very best books on the topic too. 😊
Rebellion To Tyrants Is Obedience To God…. That's Hardcore
A yes america golden age wheb they were not there
The foundation of the 1st Amendment may be found in Puritans killing Quakers and the Pilgrims having a, 'TALK', with the Puritans, (1723(6)?). EErels Christian Handbook.
If anyone knows of more sources of this info., post it.
This kind of theocracy makes me very disturbed, concerned about our future for individual freedom and liberty.
The ox knoweth his owner, and the ass his master's crib: but (America) doth not know, my people doth not consider.
Ah sinful nation, a people laden with iniquity, a seed of evildoers, children that are corrupters: they have forsaken the LORD, they have provoked the Holy One of A+(America) unto anger, they are gone away backward.
Love the daily brainwashing of kids keep it up !
This was so interesting and informative. Thank you. I have a question: Why did you say from Georgia to Massachusetts and not from Georgia to New Hampshire, which is further north of Massachusetts? From a retired NH elementary school teacher
I had Professor Kidd for the first half of US History. His focus is on religious history and he even wrote a book on the Great Awakening.
This was great! Are you going to make a video on the Second Great Awakening?
Coloca dublagem, assim posso compartilhar aqui no meu país, abraço.
Thank You Avinu Malkeinu For Yeshuah HaMashiach
We must purge our country of AIPAC and other bad influencers.
“Let the name of Whitefield perish, but Christ be glorified….Let my name die everywhere, let even my friends forget me, if by that means the cause of the blessed Jesus may be promoted”
—Rev George Whitefield
Those unalienable rights written in the constitution should have been "Life, Liberty and the Pursuit of Responsibility" ✅
G💗🙌🇺🇸👩😇🌏💰
From "Great Awakening" to 1960s and we have prayer & bible reading declared as unconstitutional in public schools. But that motto of "Rebellion to tyrants is obedience to God" almost sounds orgasmic! Happy Thanksgiving y'all
And now King Trump rules America, ironic.
4th, 23 November 2025
Thank you God for all your blessings to me and my family for the strength you give me each day and for all the people around me who make life more meaningful praise God praying for everyone everyday God bless you all
Wishing everyone a blessed happy thanksgiving praise God praying for everyone everyday God bless you all
Jesus Christ died for our Sins according to the scriptures and that he was buried and that he Rose again the third day praise God praying for everyone everyday God bless you all…