How Did The Second Great Awakening Influence The Women's Rights Movement?

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The Second Great Awakening began in the late eighteenth century, although really gained momentum in the early nineteenth century. This period of the early nineteenth century was an attempt at the revival of the protestant religion. During this period, Americans began to truly question and explore new ideas of a devout lifestyle. Countless people were converted and many churches were renovated and reinvigorated. Not only affecting religion, the Second Great Awakening influenced many other aspects such as temperance movement, the women's rights movement, and abolishment of slavery. Through the new negative outlook on alcohol consumption and a want to end the slave trade and set many slaves to their freedom, the Second Great Awakening caused temperance and abolitionism to be two of the many movements brought to light in this time. …show more content…
This means that instead of being predestined, which states that salvation or damnation are foreordained and unalterable for any person, you had the opportunity to do good deeds throughout your life to dictate where you are to be brought in the afterlife. As the religious revival was traveling through the new United States, many men and women were attending infamous camp meetings. They attended these meeting to display their views and their concerns about their new nation and its well being. Throughout this time or revival and self righteousness, many were looking for morally and socially unacceptable actions throughout the nation. Prison reform, the abstinence from alcoholic beverages, the women's rights movement, abolishment of slavery, advancements in literature, and reform in education were all products of this period of reform movements. Abolition and temperance were two of the large moral and social issues brought to light in the early nineteenth