Aether and The Field: The Great Awakening (Episode 2)

The rise of expectations and challenges to religious belief.

Vahid Houston Ranjbar
3 min readNov 30, 2020
Photo by Vishal Shah from Pexels

What Emerson was probably sensitive to but is little known today, was that in the late 18th and early 19th century, this expectation grew very acute when a renaissance of messianic expectations erupted all over the Christian and Islamic world. In the Christian world these expectations were known as the Great Awakenings. During the so-called 2nd Great Awakening, many Christians were awaiting a great change in human affairs. A large number of them were convinced that this would occur around the middle of the 19th century. In 1818 William Miller, a lay Baptist minister from Massachusetts after careful study of the book of Daniel in the Bible, had determined that “in about twenty-five years (1843) … all the affairs of our present state would be wound up.” He would later become one of the more well-known and famous advocates for the impending return of Christ, attracting many followers who waited for Christ’s return in 1843 and later in 1844. A similar sort of expectation even led a group of Protestant Germans, known as the Templars, to move to present day Israel to await the descent of Christ. In Haifa in 1868 they established a significant colony at the base of Mount Carmel. Of course, when the followers of these movements did not observe him physically…

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Vahid Houston Ranjbar
Vahid Houston Ranjbar

Written by Vahid Houston Ranjbar

I am a research physicist working on beam and spin dynamics. I like to write about connections between science and religion.

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