This is part 3 of a 7 part series under the title of, "Why Christians Disagree -Scripture, History, and the Loss of Memory." Part 2 can be found at: Sola Scriptura and the Problem of Authority
- Part 4 will follow shortly.
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By the beginning of the nineteenth century, profound changes were taking place throughout the English-speaking world. Political revolutions had challenged long-established institutions. Democratic ideals were spreading rapidly. Literacy rates were increasing. Printing technology made books and pamphlets more accessible than ever before, and affordable Bibles were finding their way into countless homes.
These developments produced many positive results. More people could read for themselves. More people had access to Scripture. More people were able to participate in religious discussions that had once been limited largely to clergy and scholars.
At the same time, these changes also transformed how religious authority was understood.
For centuries, Christians had interpreted Scripture within communities shaped by creeds, confessions, traditions, and established theological frameworks. The Protestant Reformation had challenged certain aspects of ecclesiastical authority, but the Reformers themselves remained deeply rooted in the historic church. They appealed to the early church fathers, respected the ancient creeds, and understood themselves to be recovering rather than reinventing Christianity.
The generations that followed increasingly moved in a different direction.
As confidence in inherited traditions declined, confidence in personal interpretation increased. More and more Christians became convinced that authentic Christianity could be recovered simply by setting aside centuries of theological development and returning directly to the Bible. The desire was understandable. If Scripture was God's Word, why not read it for oneself? Why not strip away later traditions and recover the faith of the apostles?
This impulse would become one of the defining characteristics of the Second Great Awakening.
The Second Great Awakening is often remembered primarily as a period of revival. That description is accurate as far as it goes. Across North America and parts of Britain, large gatherings drew thousands of attendees. Passionate preaching emphasized personal conversion, repentance, and commitment to Christ. Churches grew rapidly, missionary activity expanded, and many social reform movements found inspiration in the revival spirit of the age.
Yet the Second Great Awakening was more than a revival movement.
It was also a revolution in religious authority.
Increasingly, ordinary Christians became convinced that they could set aside centuries of theological reflection, read the Bible for themselves, and recover the original faith of the apostles. The desire was often sincere and admirable. Yet when thousands of individuals and movements attempted this task independently, the result was not a single restoration of primitive Christianity but a remarkable proliferation of competing restorations. Each claimed biblical support. Each claimed to have recovered truths lost by previous generations. Each appealed to Scripture. Yet they often arrived at radically different conclusions.
This phenomenon raises an important question. If all these groups were reading the same Bible, why were they reaching such different conclusions?
The answer is not that Scripture had changed. Nor is it that the participants were insincere. Rather, it illustrates a principle discussed in the previous chapter: every reader approaches Scripture through a particular interpretive framework. When traditional frameworks are rejected, new frameworks inevitably emerge. The individual does not cease interpreting; he simply interprets differently.
The nineteenth century provided fertile ground for this process.
Many revivalists believed that denominational traditions had corrupted authentic Christianity. The solution, they argued, was to return directly to the Bible and reconstruct the church from the ground up. This restorationist impulse became one of the most powerful religious forces of the age.
The results were dramatic.
Some movements sought to restore what they believed to be New Testament church government. Others attempted to restore apostolic worship practices. Still others focused on recovering forgotten prophetic truths. Each movement believed it had rediscovered an important piece of biblical Christianity that previous generations had overlooked or abandoned.
The Stone-Campbell Movement sought to restore primitive Christianity by rejecting denominational labels and returning to the practices of the New Testament church. The Millerite movement became convinced that careful study of biblical prophecy revealed the timing of Christ's return. New restorationist groups emerged throughout North America, each claiming a fresh understanding of Scripture and a renewed connection to apostolic Christianity.
Not all of these movements remained within the boundaries of historic Christian orthodoxy.
The nineteenth century also witnessed the rise of Mormonism, Christian Science, and movements that would later contribute to the development of Jehovah's Witnesses. While these groups differed significantly from one another, they shared a common conviction that long-established Christian traditions had failed and that biblical truth needed to be recovered through fresh interpretation.
This remarkable proliferation of movements has few parallels in earlier Christian history.
The Middle Ages certainly witnessed theological controversies, dissenting groups, and reform movements. Various challenges emerged, including the Cathars, Waldensians, Lollards, Hussites, and other movements that questioned aspects of the established church. Earlier centuries had faced their own crises, including Arianism, Pelagianism, Donatism, Nestorianism, and numerous other controversies.
Yet the scale was different.
Most medieval controversies occurred within a culture that still recognized the authority of the broader church, even when particular leaders or practices were challenged. New movements certainly arose, but they did not multiply at anything approaching the rate seen during the nineteenth century.
By contrast, the decades surrounding the Second Great Awakening produced an extraordinary number of denominations, restorationist movements, prophetic systems, sects, and cultic groups. Entirely new theological systems emerged. New interpretations of prophecy appeared. New understandings of Israel, the church, the kingdom, and the end times gained widespread acceptance.
The difference was not merely theological. It reflected a profound shift in how authority itself was understood.
Increasingly, the individual reader became the primary interpreter of Scripture. Appeals to church history carried less weight. Creeds were viewed with suspicion. The wisdom of previous generations was often regarded as a barrier rather than a resource. What mattered most was not what Christians had believed historically but what an individual believed he could discover directly from the biblical text.
This shift did not necessarily begin with hostility toward tradition. In many cases it began with a sincere desire to recover biblical truth. Yet the unintended consequence was fragmentation.
When hundreds of groups simultaneously attempt to restore original Christianity while rejecting the interpretive conclusions of previous generations, the result is not necessarily unity. More often, it is multiplication. Each movement thinks they have discovered something different. Each emphasizes different passages. Each develops distinct theological priorities. Each becomes convinced that it has found what others have missed.
The irony is striking.
Many of these movements were motivated by a desire to overcome division. They sought to return to a pure and original Christianity that existed before denominations and theological disputes. Yet the very process of independent restoration often produced additional divisions and new denominations.
The result was a religious landscape unlike anything the Christian world had previously experienced. The nineteenth century saw more denominational innovation than the previous thousand years of Western Christianity combined.
By the end of the nineteenth century, Protestant Christianity had become increasingly fragmented. Alongside traditional denominations stood restorationist movements, Adventist groups, holiness movements, Pentecostal precursors, prophetic conferences, and a growing number of organizations devoted to recovering what they believed were neglected biblical truths.
Many of the ideas that continue to shape modern evangelicalism emerged from this environment. Restorationism, futurism, dispensationalism, British-Israelism, prophetic speculation, and various forms of Christian nationalism all developed within a culture increasingly convinced that inherited interpretations could be discarded and replaced by fresh readings of Scripture.
This does not mean that every movement arising from the period was equally mistaken, nor does it mean that every new insight was false. History demonstrates that the church has often benefited from reform and correction. The question is not whether reform is necessary. The question is how reform should occur and what role history, tradition, and the broader Christian community should play in the process.
The Second Great Awakening therefore deserves to be remembered not only as a revival movement but also as a turning point in the history of biblical interpretation. It marked a moment when the democratization of religious authority accelerated dramatically and when confidence in individual interpretation reached unprecedented levels.
The democratization of interpretation produced both opportunities and dangers. Scripture became accessible to ordinary believers on an unprecedented scale. Yet access to Scripture did not always bring access to the historical context in which Scripture had been interpreted. Many readers possessed a Bible but little familiarity with the theological debates that had shaped Christian doctrine over the previous eighteen centuries. As a result, ideas long discussed or rejected sometimes reappeared in new forms, often presented as forgotten truths recovered directly from Scripture.
The effects of that shift continue to shape Christianity today.
To understand many of the theological systems that dominate
the modern religious landscape, we must first understand the environment that
produced them. It is to one of those movements—restorationism and the attempt
to recover primitive Christianity—that we now turn our attention.
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Part 4 "Restorationism and the Reinvention of Christianity" is next.
Watch for it.