Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 July 2009
In March 1835 Charles Finney told a gathering in New York City: “If the church will do all her duty, the millennium may come in this country in three years.” This statement has often served as an epigram for the era, the motto of that movement for revivalism and social reform that, having already swept the churches, was to so infuse the culture with its moral imperatives as to make a Civil War against slavery inevitable and the hegemony of evangelical Protestantism secure. On this reading Finney's declaration marks the midpoint in a story of triumph—triumph for revival religion, and triumph for a nation that aspired to righteousness.
Earlier versions of this paper were delivered at the Center of Theological Inquiry and the Center for the Study of American Religion at Princeton University. I am grateful to the participants at both venues for their comments and questions; similarly to Professors Laurie Maffly-Kipp and Mark Noll. The research was supported by generous grants from the Evangelical Scholarship Initiative of the Pew Charitable Trusts and from the National Endowment for the Humanities and by in-kind assistance from CTI.
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54. Very sympathetic biographical studies are Raser, Harold E., Phoebe Palmer: Her Life and Thought (Lewiston, Maine: Edwin Mellen, 1987);Google Scholar and White, Charles E., The Beauty of Holiness: Phoebe Palmer as Theologian, Revivalist, Feminist, and Humanitarian (Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 1986).Google Scholar But see also Hovet, Theodore, “Phoebe Palmer's ‘Altar Phraseology’ and the Spiritual Dimension of Women's Sphere,” Journal of Religion 63 (1983):264–80.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
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