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  1. revival-library.org › histories › 1801-cane-ridge-revivalCane Ridge Revival 1801

    Cane Ridge Revival 1801. Cane Ridge Revival, America. 1801 August – Barton Stone. Barton Stone. Impressed by the revivals in 1800, Barton Stone, a Presbyterian minister, organized similar meetings in 1801 in his area at Cane Ridge, northeast of Lexington.

  2. Aug 28, 2017 · Let those stories fan the embers in your life back to flame. We need God to do it again, and do it like Cane Ridge! You can learn more about the Cane Ridge Revival along with nine other moves of God in my latest book, Trail of Fire. Trail of Fire tells true stories from 10 of the most powerful moves of God.

  3. From August 6-12, as many as 20,000 people came to Cane Ridge, northeast of Lexington, for a sacramental meeting often remembered as “America’s Pentecost.”. For over a year strange occurrences had been reported at revivals in southern and central Kentucky: jerks, barking, “falling down” and piercing shrieks accompanied fervent ...

  4. Cane Ridge has gone down in history as the largest spiritual awakening, and perhaps the most far-reaching on the frontier, in American history. Revival and Revivalism: The Making and Marring of American Evangelicalism 1750-1858, by Ian Murray. Holy Fairs: Scotland and the Making of American Revivalism, by Leigh Eric Schmidt.

  5. One of the earliest and largest revivals of the Second Great Awakening occurred in Cane Ridge, Kentucky, over a one-week period in August 1801. The Cane Ridge Revival drew between 10,000 to 20,000 people, possibly as many as one in every ten residents of Kentucky.

  6. Cane Ridge remained the biggest, and unmatched in the unusual physical effects it produced. The meeting, which came to an end only when food ran out, was a significant event, helping make revivals a core element of American Protestantism.

  7. Sacramental communion events in the months preceding the one scheduled to begin in early August at Cane Ridge had attracted thousands of people - 4,000 at Concord, 6,000 at Lexington, and 10,000 at Indian Creek in Harrison County. ... His description of the Cane Ridge Revival, taken from a letter to the Rev. Doctor John King on September 25 ...

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