Cities grew because of the industrial revolution. With urban growth came serious problems; problems that still defy solution. This page looks at the city's problems and then examines the life of the greatest revivalist of the late 1800s. I. BACKGROUND When winds of revival swept the country, no one completely ignored
the cities but most of America's population was rural. By the 1830s,
evangelist C.G.
Finney began concentrating on city evangelism. He believed the
nation's cultural life flowed from the cities t Two factors complicated evangelistic work in America's cities. First, many farm boys headed for the cities to find work. You see this movement from the farm to the city as early as the 1820s. When these young men reached the city several changes occurred. The city, with its many temptations and material opportunities, undercut their rural value system. Second, continuing immigration decreased work opportunities for native born Americans. Most of the immigrants settled in the cities. European immigrants also found themselves cut off from their previous value system. American cities grew rapidly. Chicago illustrates this best. Located in America's heartland, Chicago was a collection of seventeen houses in 1833. Eighty years later, Chicago had grown into the fifth largest city in the world and by 1900 it's population numbered 1,700,000. As the cities grew, the church faced the question of trying to ministry to a society involved in rapid growth. East coast Christians formed city missionary societies very early. Most of these societies reflect the impact of the "Benevolent Empire" in that they are pluralistic, voluntary and lay oriented. II. MEETING THE CITIES' PROBLEMS We identify "rescue missions" with city environments. However, most urban missionary societies did not organize like "rescue missions." "Seaman's Institutes" were set up first to reach sailors. Believers established these institutes on the east coast and along the Great Lakes. They provided housing, meals and religious instruction to sailors. The Salvation
Army organized specifically to meet city needs. William
Booth (1829-1912) orga Another organization which met the needs of the city was the Young Men's Christian Association (YMCA). Young men working in a large London mercantile business founded the first Y in 1844. George Williams, appalled at the lack of supervision for young men working in London stores and factories began Bible studies and religious services. Most large companies provided dormitory facilities for the many young men heading for the cities in those days. Factory and store owners quickly saw the value of the Y and help set them up in various locations. By 1847, the YMCA regularly offered Bible classes but it continued as a Christian hotel with religious services. The YMCA reached North America in 1851 when the organization established branches simultaneously in Montreal and Boston. Once established in the United States, the Y movement grew rapidly. By 1860, more than 205 YMCAs throughout the United States offered identical services to those in London. The YMCA expanded in 1858 when it established the first YMCA on a college campus at the University of Michigan. In time the Y's developed a fourfold program: spiritual, social, mental and physical. Early YMCAs were evangelistic. Many young men spent week ends and evenings in street evangelism distributing tracts and Bibles. Others served in city missions and preached from soap boxes on street corners. The YMCAs led in one of the most effective revival efforts of the late 1850s. Called "The Businessman's Revival," this revival grew out of a noon prayer meeting held at a New York YMCA. From New York, meetings spread to other cities around the country. All meetings followed the same format. Prayer meetings met from 12 noon to 1 p.m. Since businessmen led the meetings, they began and ended right on time. Men dropped in for as long as they could. Meetings were kept informal and unstructured except that leaders set up the service on five minute segments. Anyone could pray or preach as long as they kept to the five minute schedule. No activity succeeded itself. Observers could identify no visible leader. During the period of "The Businessman's Revival" American church membership increased 10%. Another YMCA outreach was the United States Christian Commission. The Y developed this organization during the Civil War as a YMCA for soldiers. The organization provided male nurses, workers who read letters from home, wrote letters and helped make contacts between families and commanding officers. Dwight L. Moody spend a couple of years with the USCC. III. REVIVALISM AND THE CITIES
Moody moved to Chicago where he hoped to find greater business opportunities. Rapidly growing Chicago was rapidly becoming the northwest's commercial center. Most retail stores in rural farming areas purchased their merchandise from Chicago wholesalers. Often these small businesses ran up accounts they couldn't pay. Moody then obtained the paper and tried to collect the debts. He persuaded Chicago merchants to accept discounted payments and Moody then persuaded the debtors to repay the bills at the discounted rate. He was so successful in this business that he saved $15,000 in a short time. While in Chicago, Moody became active in a Congregational Church. He
rented a few extra pews then went out on the Chicago streets to fill
them. At a nearby mission he taught boys and built an attendance of
1,500. This Chicago mission became the Illinois Street Church. In 1861
Moody gave up his business to become an independent inner city
missionary. By the late 1860s, Moody felt more effort should be expended to reach the cities. While attending a Sunday School Convention in Indianapolis in 1870, Moody heard Ira Sankey sing. Moody walked up to Sankey and told him to meet him on a street corner near the convention hall at 6 p.m. Moody, who weighed about 300 pounds, was hard to disobey. Sankey showed up early. Moody arrived about one minute to six carrying a soap box. He picked Sankey up, put him on the box and said, "Sing." Sankey sang and a crowd gathered and Moody preached. Moody enjoyed little success during his early revivals. By 1870, however, he had become a full time evangelist. In 1872, Moody and Sankey went to England where his successes began. Four hundred responded to his first sermon. In 1873, they returned to the United States but again faced spotty successes. Only after a second trip to England did their American work take off. Moody established many of the contemporary revival methods. He began using massed choirs, ushers, advance preparation committees, and tickets for admission. The three "Rs" characterized his preaching: ruin by sin, redemption by Christ and regeneration by the Holy Spirit. In 1892, a heart ailment forced Moody into retirement. Chicago clergy
invited Moody back to the city for the 1894 World's Fair. They had
requested that the fair close down on Sundays but the fair committee
refused. Moody's revival services drew such huge attendances that the
fair forced down out of necessity. The 1800s also saw the development of the "Princes of
the Protestant Pulpit." There were many individuals who
fit this categorization, but I will name only two. The first is Henry
Ward Beecher (1813-1887), a Congregational minister and
1837 graduate of Lane Theological Seminary. Beecher ministe
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