Revivalism and the origins of Newfoundland Methodism, 1766-1774

Laurence Coughlan, SPG missionary in Conception Bay from 1766 to 1773, published An Account of the Work of God in Newfoundland, North America (1776), containing his parishioners' first-hand accounts of their religious experiences. The thesis seeks to interpret these accounts in the context of t...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Barrett, S. Dawn (Sylvia Dawn)
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Memorial University of Newfoundland 1993
Subjects:
Online Access:https://research.library.mun.ca/5917/
https://research.library.mun.ca/5917/1/Barrett_SDawn.pdf
https://research.library.mun.ca/5917/3/Barrett_SDawn.pdf
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Summary:Laurence Coughlan, SPG missionary in Conception Bay from 1766 to 1773, published An Account of the Work of God in Newfoundland, North America (1776), containing his parishioners' first-hand accounts of their religious experiences. The thesis seeks to interpret these accounts in the context of the religious revival that produced them, with emphasis on its sociological, historical and theological horizons. -- Societal conflict, based on long-standing enmity between merchants and boat-keepers, was exacerbated in Conception Bay in the 1760's by a wave of Irish immigration. Harbour Grace merchants responded by building a church in order to control the populace. In neighbouring Carbonear, many of whose inhabitants originated from Poole in Dorset where dissenting religions predominated, steps were taken to have Laurence Coughlan, a former Wesleyan lay preacher, ordained for the Newfoundland ministry. - The dysphoria caused by social stress predisposed an emotional and ecstatic religious response. The needed catalyst was provided by Coughlan, whose sermon contrasting the agonizing death of a man who opposed his born again theology with the joyful death of a redeemed sinner initiated a religious revival in the winter of 1768-69. - The conversion narratives indicate that Coughlan was preaching an experiential heart religion in which justification was described in emotional and ecstatic terms. A comparison with the theology of John Wesley indicates that perfection, the central Methodist doctrine, received little emphasis, and the soteriological principles espoused approached those of the London enthusiasts whom Wesley had repudiated and with whom Coughlan had previously associated. -- Central to the community's religious experience was the sharing of conversion narratives and the relating of after-walk accounts at weekly class meetings. Conveying their personal experience of the grace of God to others marked a decision to surrender to a new ideal, and involved a change in self-concept and the emergence of a new social ...