- Part 5 will follow shortly.
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The Second Great Awakening transformed more than church attendance and religious enthusiasm. It changed how many Christians understood the relationship between Scripture, history, and the church itself.
As confidence in established traditions declined and confidence in personal interpretation increased, a new question emerged: If the Bible alone is sufficient, and if centuries of church tradition have introduced errors, why not return directly to the New Testament and rebuild Christianity from its original foundations?
For many believers, this seemed not only reasonable but necessary.
This conviction gave rise to one of the most influential religious impulses of the nineteenth century: Restorationism.
Restorationism, sometimes called Christian Primitivism, is the belief that the original faith and practice of the apostolic church was lost, corrupted, or obscured over time and therefore must be restored. Unlike reform movements, which seek to correct errors while maintaining continuity with the historic church, restorationist movements generally assume that the corruption runs much deeper. The goal is not merely reform but recovery. The church must return to its original form.
The desire itself was understandable and, in many respects, admirable. Who would not want to recover the purity of apostolic Christianity? Who would not want to strip away human traditions and rediscover the teachings of Jesus and the apostles?
Yet this desire contained an assumption that would prove highly influential: that Christianity had drifted so far from its original foundations that existing churches could no longer be trusted to preserve the faith accurately.
Once that assumption was accepted, the logical next step was clear. The Bible would become the blueprint for reconstruction. A major difficulty, however, was that different groups reconstructed Christianity in different ways.
The remarkable feature of the nineteenth century was not simply that Christians desired reform. Christians had desired reform many times before. The remarkable feature was that numerous groups simultaneously concluded that authentic Christianity had been lost and that they had recovered it. Each appealed to Scripture. Each claimed to be restoring apostolic Christianity. Each believed previous generations had missed something important. Yet they often arrived at radically different conclusions.
Some concluded that the church had lost its proper structure and government. Others believed it had lost its understanding of holiness. Still others argued that the church had misunderstood prophecy, spiritual gifts, Israel, the kingdom, or the second coming of Christ.
The result was not one restoration but a type of fragmentation with many competing restorations.
The Stone-Campbell Movement sought to restore New Testament Christianity by rejecting denominational labels and emphasizing Christian unity through a return to biblical practices. The Plymouth Brethren sought to recover what they believed was the simplicity of apostolic Christianity. The Latter-day Saint movement argued that priesthood authority itself had been lost and required restoration through new revelation. Adventist movements became convinced that prophetic truths neglected for centuries had finally been rediscovered. Early Pentecostal groups believed that the supernatural gifts of the Spirit described in the New Testament had largely disappeared from the church and were now being restored in preparation for Christ's return.
In each of these movements notice the emerging pattern:
− Lost church order
− Lost holiness
− Lost prophecy
− Lost gifts
− Lost authority
Although these movements differed dramatically, they shared a common conviction: something essential had been lost, and they had found it.
This pattern extended beyond church structure and doctrine. It also influenced the understanding of Christian living itself.
One of the most influential streams emerging from the revival culture of the nineteenth century was the Holiness Movement. Like other restorationist movements, it began with the belief that something important had been neglected. Its concern, however, was not primarily church structure or prophecy. Its focus was the Christian life.
Advocates of the movement believed that many churches had become content with a faith that emphasized forgiveness while paying insufficient attention to transformation. Conversion was celebrated, but sanctification seemed neglected. Salvation was proclaimed, but victory over sin appeared increasingly absent.
Drawing heavily from the teachings of John Wesley and the Methodist tradition, Holiness teachers emphasized the possibility of deeper spiritual renewal and greater conformity to Christ. Revival meetings frequently stressed personal holiness, disciplined Christian living, and complete devotion to God.
At the center of the movement stood the doctrine often called "entire sanctification" or the "second blessing." Many believers became convinced that a distinct work of grace following conversion could enable a life of victorious obedience and freedom from conscious sin. Whether one agrees with all of its theological conclusions or not, the Holiness Movement reflected the same restorationist impulse visible elsewhere in the nineteenth century. Its adherents believed that the church had lost sight of a vital biblical truth and that Scripture provided the means to recover it.
In many respects, the movement made valuable contributions. It challenged nominal Christianity and called believers to pursue practical discipleship, moral integrity, prayer, and personal devotion. Yet it also illustrates an important feature of the restorationist mindset. Once Christians become convinced that previous generations have overlooked essential truths, there is often little agreement regarding which truths have actually been lost.
For some, the answer was holiness.
For others, it was prophecy.
And prophecy would soon become one of the most powerful forces shaping nineteenth-century Christianity.
Alongside the emphasis on holiness emerged an intense fascination with biblical prophecy. Interest in the second coming of Christ was certainly not new. Christians had anticipated Christ's return since the first century. Throughout church history various individuals and movements had attempted to predict its timing. What distinguished the nineteenth century was not the existence of prophetic speculation but its scale.
The atmosphere created by the Second Great Awakening proved especially fertile soil for prophetic excitement. Political revolutions, social upheaval, rapid technological change, and widespread revivalism convinced many that they were living in extraordinary times. Increasingly, Christians searched the books of Daniel and Revelation for clues regarding contemporary events and the timing of Christ's return.
Out of this environment emerged Adventism.
The Adventist movement traces its origins primarily to the preaching of William Miller, a Baptist lay preacher who became convinced that careful study of biblical prophecy revealed the approximate timing of Christ's return. Miller concluded that Christ would return during the early 1840s and eventually settled upon October 22, 1844.
The prediction failed. The event later became known as the Great Disappointment.
One might reasonably assume that a failed prophecy would end the movement. Instead, it fragmented. Some followers abandoned the movement altogether. Others returned to their former churches. Still others concluded that the date had been correct but that the event itself had been misunderstood. Various groups emerged, each attempting to explain the disappointment while preserving portions of Miller's prophetic framework.
Out of this environment arose several Adventist organizations, including the Seventh-day Adventist Church and the Advent Christian Church. Other groups would later develop theological connections to Adventist ideas even while departing from them in significant ways.
The significance of Adventism extends beyond its own denominational history. Like many restorationist movements, Adventism was built upon the conviction that the church had misunderstood an important biblical truth for centuries. Through renewed study of Scripture, forgotten prophetic knowledge had supposedly been recovered.
By this point a pattern should be emerging:
− The restoration of church structure.
− The restoration of holiness.
− The restoration of prophetic truth.
Each represented a different answer to the same question: What had Christianity lost?
The irony is difficult to miss. Many restorationist movements sought to overcome division. Their stated goal was often Christian unity through a return to biblical foundations. Yet because different groups reached different conclusions regarding what needed to be restored, the result was frequently greater fragmentation rather than less.
The same Bible that inspired the restorationist impulse also produced multiple and competing restorations.
This does not mean the desire for reform was wrong. The church has always required renewal and correction. Nor does it mean that every restorationist insight was mistaken. Many movements identified genuine problems and called attention to neglected biblical themes.
The lesson is not that reform should be avoided.
The lesson is that reform should be pursued with humility.
History is not the enemy of biblical faithfulness. It is often one of its greatest allies. Before concluding that a forgotten truth has finally been rediscovered, it is worth asking whether previous generations have already wrestled with the same questions and learned lessons we have forgotten.
The nineteenth century witnessed an extraordinary number of attempts to restore authentic Christianity. Yet among all the competing restorations, some would prove far more influential than others. In particular, the restoration of prophetic truth would soon merge with new ideas about Israel, national destiny, and biblical prophecy.
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Watch for it.