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U.S. History 1877-Present 1: Mormons and Shakers 83 Views


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Description:

Ahh the Second Great Awakening. Today's video will teach us about Mormons, Shakers, and even anxious benches. What's a bench got to be anxious about anyways? Being sat on?

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Transcript

00:03

Okay, sure. The Second...

00:05

Great Awakening was all about taking authority out of the hands....

00:08

of traditional religious leaders and...

00:10

plopping it into the hands of individuals.

00:12

But still, it's kind of hard to have any movement without a leader.

00:15

Right?

00:16

So let's go through a quick rundown...

00:18

of the stars of Great Awakening, Part Deux.

00:21

First up on the roster...

00:23

is Charles Finney, but...

00:25

some called him Chuck Finn,

00:27

and they got smacked.

00:28

Well, Charles Finney was a lawyer turned hardcore revivalist.

00:31

Despite the fact that he had no religious training,

00:33

he ended up being one of the most influential...

00:36

preachers in American history.

00:38

He didn't give a flip about traditional religious...

00:40

establishments. Instead, he learned...

00:42

his "new measures" from other...

00:44

revivalists that establishment ministers looked down upon.

00:47

Like a lot of preachers in this crew,

00:49

Finney assaulted his listeners...

00:51

with emotion-packed messages...

00:53

of sin and forgiveness.

00:55

Rich and poor alike came together to hear Finney tell them they were...

00:58

all horrible sinners.

01:00

He used his fiery camp sermons...

01:02

to bring society's fat cats down to Earth.

01:05

The skinny cats, you know, he just left it in the sky.

01:07

Before every revival,

01:09

he plotted with supports to identify...

01:11

a backsliding, vulnerable, and...

01:13

usually important member of the community.

01:16

Then he invited the target to...

01:18

sit before the congregation...

01:20

on the "anxious bench."

01:22

Yeah, that's actually what they called it: the anxious bench.

01:24

Once he got his victim into the anxious bench,

01:26

Finney skewered the person with...

01:28

facts of their misbehavior until the person cracked and...

01:31

begged for God's mercy.

01:33

We need therapy just thinking about this one.

01:35

While the anxious bench does sound horrifying,

01:38

because it was,

01:39

it actually did have its appeal.

01:41

Remember, before revivalists like Finney, people thought...

01:44

there wasn't a single thing they could do...

01:46

to be saved.

01:47

But a sin confessing experience,

01:49

that let people get everything off their chest...

01:51

and promise salvation,

01:53

was actually relief to some.

01:54

It was like a sauna followed by a...

01:56

polar plunge, but for the soul.

01:58

Alright, let's move on to Joseph Smith,

02:00

a.k.a Mr. Mormon.

02:02

Smith claimed to have discovered a new revelation from...

02:05

God in the woods outside his Palmyra home...

02:08

in Western New York.

02:10

According to Smith, the holy words were etched on...

02:12

golden tablets and interpreted...

02:14

by Smith through the use of what he called a "peek stone."

02:18

Peek stone sounds something like...

02:20

what people get in trouble for while in the dressing rooms.

02:23

But it's not that.

02:24

Smith was so psyched about his...

02:26

revelations that he started writing a book about them.

02:29

Somebody's come to most of our doors...

02:31

with an offer for a free copy of...

02:33

what those writing became, and yes,

02:35

these day's it's called The Book of Mormon.

02:38

Smith preached that all but a very few...

02:40

would find salvation, and that life...

02:42

was a continual process of self-improvement that actually...

02:45

began with preexistence and...

02:47

continued after death.

02:49

It also taught that God was a still-changing being,

02:52

not perfect and static, and that...

02:54

Jesus was only most intelligent child.

02:57

Yo, shaking the boat there, J.S.

03:00

This meant that man and God actually had a...

03:02

lot in common.

03:03

They weren't separated by Calvin's virtually...

03:06

unbridgeable gap,

03:08

and they weren't dependent on God's undeserved mercy for salvation.

03:11

Instead, man could work on himself,

03:14

try to improve, and reasonably aspire...

03:17

to be like God.

03:18

And yes, Joseph Smith also preached the practice of polygamy,

03:22

or having multiple wives.

03:23

The practice caused a lot of debate,

03:25

and even fierce attacks on Mormons throughout...

03:27

the years. Well the Church of Latter Day Saints officially banned...

03:30

polygamy in 1890,

03:32

but it still goes on in select sects today,

03:34

which of course a lot of people still have strong opinions about.

03:37

Probably not that big a deal anymore.

03:39

Last but not least,

03:40

we'll take a lot at the Shakers,

03:42

who were known for their dance parties.

03:44

Did you think we were joking?

03:45

No, really.

03:46

Shakers were given the name because of their unique....

03:48

bodily response to church services.

03:50

So yeah, there's a whole lot of shaking going on.

03:53

Well, theologically Shakers were...

03:55

similar to Quakers.

03:56

They were kind of an off-shoot really.

03:58

They believed in pacifism, simplicity,

04:00

and the importance of community.

04:02

But unlike Quakers, they practiced...

04:04

celibacy.

04:05

This means that none of the shaken' that was...

04:07

going on was going on in the bedroom.

04:10

One of the truly remarkable things about Shakers...

04:12

was that they believed in radical equality.

04:15

They had a ton of female leaders,

04:17

and tried hard to keep gender prejudice out...

04:19

of their communities.

04:20

The church's American founder, Anne Lee was...

04:23

even designated the female...

04:25

incarnation of God.

04:27

Having assumed human form first as a man,

04:29

God now came to Earth as a woman.

04:31

Shakers also believed that the millennium,

04:33

the thousand year period of perfect...

04:35

peace on Earth before the end of time,

04:37

was immanent.

04:38

So Earthly distractions, like marriage....

04:40

just seemed like a waste of time.

04:42

this might have been part of what attracted some women...

04:44

converts who were fed up with the restrictions of...

04:46

marriage in those time.

04:48

Shakers often lived communally, like...

04:50

really community, private property was...

04:52

limited to just a few possessions and...

04:54

the community's work was directed by elders.

04:56

While they tried to make everything they need themselves,

04:59

they sometimes did a little trading with...

05:01

their non-Shaker neighbors.

05:02

In fact, they became famous for their simple,

05:05

well-crafted furniture.

05:06

So if you see a Shaker chair at an antique...

05:08

place, don't think it's gonna give you a massage.

05:11

Yeah, made of wood.

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