The Second Great Awakening:
O rejected the idea of the Trinity.
O was consistent with the ideas of the Enlightenment.
O helped promote universalism and Unitarianism.
O was confined to New England.
O began as an effort by church establishments to revitalize their organizations.

Respuesta :

Answer:

The right answer is:

"It began as an effort by church establishments to revitalize their organizations."

Explanation:

The Second Great Awakening (1795-1835) was a movement that aimed at religious and faith revival after the years of republicanism and strong feelings of separation of the affairs of religion from the issues of the state, attitudes prevalent in the 1770s-1790s.  Open meetings in large cities and towns were characteristic of this era, and camp meetings in frontier areas. Membership of churches increased, particularly among Baptists and Methodists. The movement stimulated many moral reforms

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