Timelines – Revivals
BC
OT – (A Great Chronology of the Old Testament)(*Slick)
Genesis
2000
1900
1800
1700
1600
1500
|[1462-1422BC] – Revival at Sinai {Exodus 32-34}
|[1422BC]
|| – Othniel {Judges 3:7-11}
|| – Ehud {Judges 3:12-30}
|| – Deborah & Barak {Judges 4:1-5:31}
|| – Jepthah {Judges 10:6-12:7}
|| – Samuel {Samuel 7:2-12}
|[1065BC]
1000
|[985BC]
|| – Solomon’s Dedication of the Temple {2 Chronicles 5:1-7:10}
|[945BC]
|| – Asa {2 Chronicles 15:1-18}
|| – Elijah at Carmel {1Kings 18:1-46}
|| – Isaiah {Isaiah 6:1-13} (Personal Revival & Awakening)
|| – Hezekiah {2Kings 18:3-7 & 2Chronicles 29:1-36}
|| – Josiah {2Kings 22:8-23:3}
|| – Jonah {Jonah 1:1-4:11}
|[586BC]
|| – Zerubbabel {Ezra 3:1-6}
|| – Zerubbabel II {Ezra 6:13-22}
|[516BC]
|| – Ezra {Ezra 9:1-10:17}
|| – Ezra & Nehemiah {Nehemiah 8:1-11:2}
400
| [400-~5BC] – The Great Quiet {This period is during the rise of Rome and the time between the Old & New Testaments}
1
NT – (A Great Chronology of the New Testament)(*Slick)
History of the Early New Testament Church
AD
1
|[30AD] – Jesus Dies & Resurrection
|[30AD] – Pentacost {Acts 2}
|| – Samaria {Acts 8:1-25}
|| – Damascus {Acts 9:1-31}
|| – Cornelius’ Household {Acts 10:1-11:18}
|| – Antioch {Acts 11:19-30}
|| – Cyprus {Acts 13:1-12}
|| – Pisidia {Acts 13:13}
|| – Iconium {Acts 14:1-5}
|| – Lystra {Acts 14:8-21}
|[51-54AD] – Athens, Corinth under Paul; Paul’s Second Missionary Journey {Acts 15:36-18:22}
|| – Philippi {Acts 16:1-40}
|| – Thessolonica {Acts 17:1-9}
|| – Berea {Acts 17:10-15}
|[54-58AD] – Ephesus. Paul’s third missionary journey {Acts 18:23-19}
|[61-65AD] – Rome – Paul, Peter, Luke, Mark & others.
|[69AD] – Polycarp is born.
|[90-96AD] – Ephesus. The Apostle John
100
|[35AD-107AD] – Ignatius lived.
|[130AD] – Iraneus – {Was born in 130AD. He was friends with Florinus in Polycarp’s house. Polycarp was a disciple of John, the disciple of John, the disciple of Jesus. So, he was a pupil of one of the disciples (a direct line to Jesus).}
|[150AD] – Phrygia & Asia Minor (*Riss)
|[February 22, 156] – Polycarp was martyred and Revival broke out in Smyrna. {His church in Smyrna (Rev. 2:8-11)} (*McDow)
|[160AD] – Tertullian is born.
|[178AD] – Lyons {Under Iraneus}
200
|[202-230AD] – Alexandria {Under Origen} (*Riss)
|[202AD] – Iraneus was martyred by Septimus Severus.
|[205AD] – Gregory the Wonderworker was born (*McDow, 101)
|[240-270AD] – Gregory the Wonderworker’s Ministry
300
|[347AD] – John of Antioch born. dies 407AD.
|[300’s] – Pachomius (d. 246); “Desert Fathers,” (*Riss)
|| – Anthony of Egypt (d. 356)
|| – John of Egypt (d. 394)
|| – Martin (d. 397)
|[389AD] – St. Patrick {is born in Bonnavem, Tabernine}
400
|[405AD] – St. Patrick is taken captive by Pirates. (*McDow, 103)
|[420’s] – Augustine, “City of GOD,” book 22. {North African Revival}
|[432AD] – Patrick {ignites revival fires and miracles in Ireland; Tara, Ireland} (*McDow, 104)
500
|[December 7, 521AD] – Columba is born.
|[563AD] – Columba {He set for Iona with 12 priests and thus started revival}
|[597AD] – {+} Columba dies.
600
|[601AD] – England under Augustine of Canterbury {Born about 545. (*Bede, Chapter 31)}
|[635AD] – Aiden in Northumbria {Sent by Iona. The King “Oswald” interpreted as he preached. Paganism was demolished. This all started by the King’s concern for his people’s spirituality.} (*McDow, 109)
|[680AD] – Boniface is born. {He was the leading revivalist of the 8th century.}
700
|[722AD] – Boniface {spearheaded an Awakening in Germany.}
|| {Following Boniface, no significant revival occured for almost four centuries. Power and dynamism of the church receded. Tradition and Doctrine took hold, (*McDow, 112).}
800
900
1000
1100
|[1100’s] – Under Bernard of Clairvaux (+d. 1153) & Hildegard of Bingen (+d. 1179), revivals spread. (*Riss)
|[1170AD] – Peter Waldo’s movement begins and goes until 1217 {the Waldensians (poor preachers), revival starts in 1179 about the verse, “Acts 5:29″}
|[1182AD] – Francis of Assisi was born.
1200
|[February 24, 1209AD] – St. Francis {hears GOD speak, “Preach…” Matthew 10:7-9. The next day at San Giorgio Church Francis preaches impromptu first sermon and revival starts. reformation in the church starts. Giving the open Bible back to men. He constantly sang, saw visions and stayed a lay-oriented leader, (not a priest), (*McDow, 118-120)}
|[1217AD] – +The end of the Waldensian revivals.
|[1221-1231AD] – Anthony of Padua, Dominic and Francis of Assisi were all leading revivals, (*Riss).
|[1226AD] – +St. Francis of Assisi dies.
1300
|[~1300AD] – John Tauler was born.
|| – John Tauler {At age 50, challenged by parishoners that he was a pharisee, he took 2 years off from preaching and returned. Revival started from his brokenness and prayer. As he preached this message and wept, 50 listeners fell to the floor as dead. Awakening began. (Matthew 25:6 was his text)} (*McDow, 122)
|[1320AD] – John Wycliffe {born about this time. He was known as the “Morningstar of the Reformation.” He was a reformer, not a revivalist/awakener.}
|[1369AD] – John Huss is born.
||[1382AD] – Wycliffe {Started the movement known as the “Lollards.” They sang and preached. They spread revival in all places. His teaching further influenced John Huss, (*McDow, 127).
||[1300’s] – Wycliffe {translated the Bible into English. He sought church reform, lost power and was persecuted because of peasant revolts.}
|[1372AD] – John Huss {was born in Husinec, Bohemia, (Reformer).
1400
|[November 1, 1414AD] – Under John Huss’ preaching, revival starts. {”I shall die with joy in the faith of the Gospel that I have preached.}
|[1415AD] – John Huss {was burned at the stake along with his writings. He was one of the greatest reformers. He saw many converted}.
|[September 21, 1452AD] – Savanarola {was born. He had visions and dreams that ignite personal revival from meditation and prayer}.
|[1483AD] – Martin Luthur {was born}
|[January 1, 1484] – Huldrich Zwingli {is born.}
|[1492AD] – Menno Simons is born.
|[1494AD] – William Tyndale {is born}
|[1494-1498AD] – Florence, Italy {Under Savanarola, revival breaks out, (*Riss)}.
|[1496AD] – Menno Simons {is born}.
1500
|[1500’s] – Revival starts in France. {Farel & Viret were the key leaders. (*Edwards, 135)
|[1505AD] – John Knox {became a great reformer}.
|[1509-1564AD] – John Calvin {Another reformer that sets up a Theocratic state. Very Authoritarian. (Geneva)}
|[1512AD] – Luthur {has his “Tower Experience”}
|[1513AD] – John Knox is born.
|[1515-1582AD] – St. Teresa of Avila {She was known for her Piety and Writings. She was also known as a “Mystic”}.
|[1517AD] – Luthur’s Protestant Reformation starts. {October 31, Luthur posts his 95 theses on the cathedral door at Wittenburg}.
||[September 21, 1522AD] – Luthur {His Bible is was published after it’s translation}
|[1522AD] – Zwingli {Leads reform that breaks loose in Switzerland. However, he ends up persecuting the Anabaptists, who were a later reformation, not a part of the Protestant Reformation}
|[1523-1529AD] – Anabaptist Revival {Zurich. Fought for believer’s baptism, not infant. They were persecuted by Catholics and Protestants.
||[1525AD] – Grebel {preaches salvation by faith and 500 people believe and are baptized, (*McDow, 156)}.
|[1536AD] – Menno Simons {converted to Christianity (Anabaptist). He was persecuted by Protestants and Catholics. A revival movement begins. Many Anabaptists were martyred. He became the greatest leader of that reform. He ran from capture, was treated as a criminal with a price on his head. He died in 1561AD. His primary ministry was in Holland and Germany. His followers then and now are known as Mennonites.
|| – {Zwingli, Calvin and Luthur enjoyed social safety as Protestants while the Anabaptists were persecuted by both the three reformers’ followers and the Catholics, (*McDow, 154)
|[1536AD] – +William Tyndale {dies}
|[February 18, 1546AD] – +Martin Luthur {died}
|[1558] – Thomas Hudson {preached house to house with Wycliffe’s Bible. Saw many converts. Martyred}.
|[November 24, 1572AD] – John Knox {His death springs up revival and reformation, (*McDow, 164)}.
|[1590AD] – Great Scottish Revival {begins. Led by John Welch, the son-in-law of John Knox. 1590-1606AD, (*Gillies, 167-170)}
|[1596AD] – Scottish General Assembly {Under the preaching of Robert Bruce of Edinburgh; the General Assembly of Scotland: May 12, 1596, Synod of Fife met at Dumfermine. James Melville presided. Revival stirs. It is part of the Great Scottish Revival, (*Gillies, 157).
1600
|[1606AD] – *The Great Scottish Revival {comes to an end}.
|[1615AD] – Richard Baxter is born.
|[1624AD] – George Fox lived. (July 1624 – January 13, 1691).
|[1625AD] – North of Ireland – Ulster. See James S. Reid’s, “History of the Presbyterian Church in Ireland,” Volume 1.
|[1625-1630AD] – West of Scotland, (*Edwards, p. 135), (*Fleming, pages. 103-104), (*Gillies, p. 197). This was the Stewarton Sickness,” (1625-1630AD) under David Dickson of Irvine, who ministered 1618-1642AD. See *Keith Hardman, “The Spiritual Awakeners,” page 33, quoting Thomas McCrie, “Sketches of Scottish Church History,” (London: Blanchard & OH, 1846), 1:190-193. See *Gillies, pages 182,197,198. See also “Narratives” (1842), part IV (pages 56-65).
|[1626AD] – North of Ireland – Josiah (Josias) Welch
|| – {at Six Mile-water Temple – Patrick} – See *Gillies, pages 168,202, “Narratives, Part VIII,” pages 102-121 and James S. Reid, “History of the Presbyterian Church in England,” Volume 1.
|[1629AD] – John Bunyan is born.
|[1630AD] – June 21 – John Livingstone, (”Livingstone of Shotts”), at Kirk of Shotts in Scotland.
|[1650-1661AD] – Scotland Revival – See *Gillies, page 202.
|[1665AD] – London at the time of the Plague, See Gillies, page 124. 10,000 people died in one week and revival hit. Gillies records that many people who were in church one day were thrown in the grave the next. Pastors died and non-conformist Puritan preachers got their chance to fill the pulpit.
|[1673AD] – William Tennant was born in 1673. He built the “Log College.” He influenced many during the Great Awakening.
|[1679-1718AD] – Revival Meetings under Solomon Stoddard, (Johnathan Edwards’ grandfather).
|| – [1679AD]
|| – [1683AD]
|| – [1696AD]
|| – [1712AD]
|| – [1718AD] – All of which were under Solomon Stoddard in Northampton, Massachusetts.
_____________________
|[Puritanism Leaders]
||[1527-1596AD] – Laurence Humphrey (President of Magdalen College, Oxford).
||[1535-1603AD] – Thomas Cartwright (Professor at Cambridge)
||[1549-1608AD] – Thomas Wilcox
||[1548-1635AD] – William Travers (Cambridge Professor)
||[1628-1688AD] – John Bunyan (Author of Pilgrim’s Progress) Jailed and persecuted for his faith.
||[1558-1603AD] – William Perkins
|| – Piety, Prayer, holiness, fasting was these leader’s call. This call led to many of the later revivals and Awakenings. *McDow.
_____________________1700|[1700AD] – Count Zinzendorf is born (Leader of the Moravians).
|[1703AD] –
Johnathan Edwards is born.
|[1703AD] –
John Wesley is born.
|[1703AD] – Gilbert Tennent is born. He is the eldest son of William Tennent and worked with his father during the revivals. He also worked with Freulinghuysen and traveled with Whitefield.
|[1704-1705AD] – Revival with Dan Forth in Taunton, Massachusettes. (*Humphrey, pp. 63-64).
|[1706AD] – Shubel Stearns is born. He led the Revival in Sandy Creek, NC.
|[1707AD] –
Charles Wesley is born.
|[1714AD] –
George Whitefield is born. He is “born again” and begins his ministry in England in 1735.
|[1714AD] – Howell Harris is born in Wales. He is born again and begins his ministry in Wales in 1735.
|[1718AD] –
David Brainerd born.
|[1720’sAD] – Freulinghuysen leads revivals in New Jersey. (See *Hardman, “The Spiritual Awakeners,” pp. 47-59)
|[1721AD] – Windham, Connecticut Revival begins. (*Humphrey, p.64)
|[1726-1776AD] – The First Great Awakening (Official Beginning – 1734AD).
|| – The Leaders of the First Great Awakening (in the Americas)
||| – William Tennent (Presbyterian)
||| – Theodore Freulinghuysen (Dutch Reformed)
||| – Johnathan Edwards (Congregational)
||| – Gilbert Tennent (Presbyterian)
||| – Shubel Stearns (Baptist)
||| – Daniel Marshall (Baptist)
||| – Eleazar Wheelock (Founded Dartmouth, Congregational)
||| – Henry Malchoir Muhlenberg (Presbyterian)
||| – Samuel Blair (Presbyterian)
||| – Samuel Davies (Presbyterian)
|| – The Leaders of the First Great Awakening (in the British Isles)
||| – John Wesley (Founded Methodism) (Wesleyan also came from Wesley)
||| – Charles Wesley (Founded Methodism)
||| – George Whitefield (Presbyterian)
|| – The Leaders of the First Great Awakening (18th Century Welsh Revival)
||| – Howell Harris (b.1714-d.1773AD)
||| – Daniel Rowland (b.1713-d.1790AD)
||| – William Williams (b.1717-d.1791AD)|[1727AD] – (August 13, 1727) – Moravian Revival at Herrnhut in Berthelsdorf, Germany under Count Nikolaus Zinzendorf.
|[1730-1733AD] – William Tennent led Revivals in New Jersey.
|[1734AD] – Revivals start in Northampton Massachusettes under Johnathan Edwards.
|[1738AD] – John Wesley has experience at Aldersgate (”My heart was strangely warmed…”), after failed ministry in Americas. (May 24, 1738). This marks his born again experience as Whitefield would say, after being affected by the Moravians beliefs and faith while traveling to the Americas.
|[1738AD] – Praying Payson born.
|[1739-1743AD] – Revivals at their Apex. (See *Gillies, pp. 305-337 (America) and also *Humphrey, pp. 46-93).
|[1742AD] – (February 18, 1742) – Cambuslang, Scotland under William McCulloch and George Whitefield. (*Gladstone, pp. 443 & 441-462 & *Gillies, pp. 5-55). This spreads throughout the area.
|[1744AD] – Revivals break out under David Brainerd as he ministers to Native Americans.
|[1745AD] –
Francis Asbury is born. He becomes an historic Methodist circuit rider and father of American Methodism. Methodism would have died in America without his work.
|[1746AD] – {+} William Tennent died.
|[1749AD] – (November 19, 1749) – Revivals in Holland – Gerardus Kuypers at Nieukirk.
|[1752AD] –
Timothy Dwight is born. He led revivals in the East in 1796. He was Johnathan Edwards’ grandson.
|[1755AD] – Sandy Creek Revival, North Carolina. Led by Shubel Stearns, a convert of Whitefield’s. He led the revival for the Baptists in Randolph County, North Carolina.
|[1758AD] – {+} Johnathan Edwards died.
|[1759-1763AD] – Revivals continue under John Wesley.
|[1760AD] – {+} Zinzendorf died.
|[1761AD] –
William Carey is born.
|[1763-1764AD] – Revivals stir again in New England, (*Hardman, p. 119).
|[1764AD] – {+} Gilbert Tennent died.
|[1766AD] –
Christmas Evans is born.
|[1770AD] – {+} George Whitefield died.
|[1771AD] – {+} Shubel Stearns died.
|[1773AD] – {+} Howell Harris died.
|[1776-1777AD] – Martin Boos (1762-1825) – Revival came through his preaching at Wiggensbach in 1776-1777. Also in Galleneukirchen.
|[1783-1827] –
Praying Payson of Portland Born and lived.
|[1784AD] – Call to prayer of Northhamptonshire, England.
|[1785AD] – Revival of the Baptists of the James River. (Manifestations were a large part of the meetings. Many were added to their number).
|[1785AD] –
Peter Cartwright is born September 1, 1785. (He became a believer when he saw a flash of light and heard, “Peter, look to Me.”
|[1787AD] – Hampton Sydney College in Virginia under their President John Blair Smith saw revival. (*Hardman, p. 133)
|[1788AD] –
Adoniram Judson born (Missionary to Burma)
|[1791AD] – {+} John Wesley died.
|[1792AD] – William Carey started in missions.
|[1792AD] –
Charles Finney is born. He was converted when he saw Jesus as face to face in the back room of his work after days of conviction and struggle.
_____________________
|*McDow and Reid describe the First Great Awakening as two separate awakenings. They say that the First Great Awakening was from 1726-1770AD and took place in America. They say the British Awakening Movement was separate and was from 1735-1791AD. However, I believe this is a sociological view and does not take into account a more supernatural-spiritual view of a connection through divine providence. No revival or Awakening can be viewed as purely sociological. To do this is to negate the very basis on which these movements occur and that is religious experience, which is more than simply sociology, but psychology, history, biology and anthropology. Awakening and Revival is not a sterile science, however at the same time, should not be studied independently apart from science, history and human experience.
_____________________|[1792-1799AD] – Revivals stir again in New England, (*Hardman, p. 119).
|[1792-1870’sAD] – The Second Great Awakening. *
|| – The Leaders of the Second Great Awakening (in the Americas)
||| – Francis Asbury (Methodist)
||| – Timothy Dwight (Congregational)
||| – James McGready (Presbyterian)
||| – Thomas Campbell (Presbyterian)
||| – Barton W. Stone (Presbyterian)
||| – Lyman Beecher (Presbyterian) Timothy Dwight’s student
||| – Ashael Nettleton (Congregational)
||| – Bennet Tyler (Congregational) Timothy Dwight’s student
||| – Nathaniel William Taylor (Congregational) Timothy Dwight’s student
||| – Alexander Campbell (Presbyterian)
||| – Charles Finney (Presbyterian, with the first hints of pentacostal slant)
|| – The Leaders of the Second Great Awakening (Scottish Revival) Early-Mid 19th Century
||| – Robert Haldane (1764AD-1842AD)
||| – James Haldane (1768AD-1851AD)
||| – Thomas Chalmers (1780AD-1847AD)
||| – Robert Murray McCheyne (1814AD-1843AD)
|| – The Leaders of the Second Great Awakening (French Revival) Early-Mid 19th Century
||| – Frederick Monod (1794AD-1863AD)
||| – Adolphe Monod (1802AD-1856AD)
|| – The Leaders of the Second Great Awakening (Switzerland Revival) Early-Mid 19th Century
||| – Robert Haldane (1764AD-1842AD)
||| – Cesar Malon (1787AD-1864AD)
||| – Francois Gaussen (1790AD-1863AD)
||| – JH Merle D’Aubigne (1794AD-1863AD)
|| – The Laymen’s Prayer Revival (1857AD-1859AD)
||| – Called the “Third Great Awakening” – 1 Million Conversions. Jeremiah Lanphier, North Dutch Church, New York.
||| – Hamilton, Ontario – Worldwide Awkening.
|| – The Second Great Awakening in Britain, (England, Scotland, Ireland & Wales). Also called the 1859 Awakening.
|| – [1859AD] – Ulster Revival, (Ireland) 100,000 conversions. Many manifestations. Led by children. (*william Grace, “The Year of Grace”)
|| – [1860’sAD] – Andrew Murray & South African Revivals. His father used to revival histories to him. Many manifestations.
|| – The Leaders of the Second Great Awakening (Welsh Revival) Early-Mid 19th Century
||| – Christmas Evans (1766AD-1838AD)
||| – John Elias (1774AD-1841AD)
|| – The Leaders of the Second Great Awakening (Netherlands Revival) Early-Mid 19th Century
||| – Groen van Printerer (1800AD-1867AD)
||| – Abraham Kuyper (1837AD-1920AD)|[1798 & 1800AD] – Moulin, Scotland under Alexander Stewart, (*Gillies IV. pp. 85-101).
_____________________*McDow & Reid record the Second Great Awakening’s dates as 1787-1843AD. However, I see it as extending from possibly 1787, but I begin in 1792 and continue a few years longer to 1870AD. It is hard to truly record some of these dates, due to some wirters not observing some parts of the religious movements as “official” or “intgritous.” I am compelled to simply collect all information whether or not the style of movement or means are to my liking or fit my theology perfectly. As Wesley stated, “If we cannot have revival without defect, give us revival defects and all.” With that stated, I record as fully all movements and events that fit inside the context of Christianity and Pre-Christian Judaism.
_____________________1800|[1800AD] – Revival breaks out in Kentucky during Communion service in June under the guidance of James McGready, (a Methodist), William McGee, (a Presbyterian) and John McGee (William’s brother and also a Methodist). The Campmeetings begin.
|[1800AD] – The official start of the Campmeetings of the Second Great Awakening.
|[1800AD] – All of America experienced an outbreak of revival, (*Hardman, p. 134).
|[1802AD] – Iredell County, North Carolina – “The Great Revival” broke out and at the start, there was a prayer meeting that unplanned, lasted 3 days! The leader was Daniel Asbury. There were, “many manifestations.”
|[1805AD] –
George Mueller was born.
|[1805AD] – Williams College Revival, (*Hardman, p. 152).
|[1808AD] – Kentucky, the Cane Ridge Revival begins.
|[1812-1813AD] – Island of Arran, Scotland under Neil McBride, (*Presbyterian Board, 74-84)
|[1812-1814AD] – Island of Skye in Scotland. (Hebrides). (*Gillies, Narratives, Part X, pp. 159-184).
|[1813AD] –
David Livingstone born.
|[1813AD] –
Robert Murray McCheyne is born.
|[1815-1818AD] – All of America was at the largest start of revival. (*Humphrey, pp. 259-263).
|[1816AD] – {+} Francis Asbury Died
|[1816-1817AD] – Breadalbane, Scotland Revival under John MacDonald of Urquhart.
|[1817AD] – {+} Timothy Dwight died.
|[1821AD] – Connecticut and Massachusetts under Ashael Nettleton. (*Humphrey, pp. 236, 242-258).
|[1820AD] –
Fanny Crosby born.
|[1820-1825AD] – Central and Western New York broke out in revival. (*Humphrey, pp. 263).
|[1824AD & 1835AD] – Island of Lewis in Scotland. (*Gillies, Narratives Part VIII, pp. 122-138).
|[1825AD-1831AD] – Oneida County, New York under Charles Finney.
|[1829AD] –
William Booth is born.
|[1830AD-1831AD] – Rochester, New York under Charles Finney.
|[1831AD] – General Outpouring of the Spirit in America. (Appendix to Spurgeon’s Lectures on Revivals).
|[1832AD] –
Hudson Taylor is born. (He is known for the China Inland Mission).
|[1832AD] – New York City – Charles Finney according TL Cuyler. (*Hardman p. 184).
|[1834AD] –
Charles Spurgeon is born.
|[1837AD] –
DL Moody is born. He becomes a shoesalesman.
|[1839AD] – (July 23), William Chalmers Burns – Great, meeting at Kilsyth, Scotland sparked by retelling of the Kirk of Shotts. (*Gillies, Narratives Part XI, pp. 185-198 & 556).
|[1840AD] – Holland – Nicholas beats in Heemstede, Netherlands.
|[1840AD] –
Ira Sankey born. “DL Moody’s singer.”
|[1840AD] – Rev. Jacob Knapp – Baltimore, New Haven, Hartford, & Boston (according to EN Kirk, “Lectures on Revivals,” p. 142).
|[1844AD] – JC Blumhardt in Moettlingen, Germany.
|[1847AD] –
Samuel Porter Jones born. (Methodist).
|[1850AD] – Adoniram Judson dies.
|1853AD] – Lord Radstock was born. He led the Russian Awakening from 1874-8.
|[1859AD] –
J. Wilbur Chapman born. “Taught Billy Sunday how to be an evangelist & saw many converted.”
|[1859AD] – Smith Wigglesworth born. He was a plumber with a studder when he began his ministry.
|[1859AD] –
Johnathan Goforth was born.
|[1859AD] – Seth Joshua was born. “He preached revival that Evan Roberts experienced GOD in when he prayed, ‘Bend Us!’”
|[1860AD] –
Rodney Smith born. Converted November 17, 1876. “The Gypsy Boy”
|[1862AD] –
Billy Sunday, born November 19.
|[1863AD] –
G. Campbell Morgan born.
|[1870AD] – John G. Lake is born March 18. He was a healing revivalist Africa & Spokane, Washington.
|[1871AD] – South Wales (*Eifon Jones, “The Welsh Revival of 1904″).
|[1872AD] – {+} Peter Cartwright dies.
|1873AD-1874AD] – (November 23) Under Moody and Sankey in Scotland and Ireland. (*Hardman, pp. 203-204).
|[1875AD] – {+} Charles Finney dies.
|[1875AD] – Under Moody and Sankey in England, (*Hardman, pp. 204-206).
|[1875AD-1877AD] – Brooklyn, Philadelphia, New York, Chicago and Boston under Moody and Sankey. (*Hardman, pp. 206-207).
|[1876AD] –
Evan Roberts is born June 8, 1876 or 1878 (Date is listed differently in two places. 1904, he experienced GOD face to face.
|[1878AD] –
Modecai Ham is born.
|[1885AD] – Localized revivals in America under Maria Woodworth Etter.
|[1890AD] – Aimee Semple McPherson, born October 9, 1890.
|[1892AD] – {+} Charles Spurgeon died.
|[1898AD] – {+}
George Mueller died.
|[1899AD] – DL Moody died, December 22, 1899.
_____________________*McDow & Reid term the time from 1901 until 1910, “the Global Revival” p. 18, “Firefall.”
_____________________1900|[1865-1912] –
“Praying” John Hyde|[1901-1907AD] – Charles Parham saw revivals of Pentecostal type around the world.
|[1904-1905AD] – Welsh Revival Begins (the beginning of the worldwide revival).
|[1856-1928AD] –
Reuben A. Torrey Congregational minister preached during the Welsh Revival.
|[1905AD] – Asbury College Revival
|[1905-1906AD] – Awakening in North America starting primarily at Asuza Street Mission that spreads throughout the US.
|[1906AD] – Samuel Porter Jones dies.
|[1906AD] – Asuza Street Revival (in old Methodist church) Under William J. Seymour termed a “Pentecostal Revival.” Located in Los Angeles (North Bonnie Brae Street, Asuza Street Mission).
|[1907AD] – Korean Revival, [*Hardman, p212].
|[1907AD] – Kathryn Kuhlman is born. Ministry begins in 1923. Miracles begin April 27, 1947.
|[1908AD] – Stephen & George Jeffreys, Welsh Revivalists (Healing).
|[1908AD] – Ira Sankey dies.
|[1913AD] – Lord Radstock dies.
|[1918AD] – Billy Graham born November 7, 1918.
|[1918AD] – J. Wilbur Chapman dies.
|[1927AD] – Shantung Revival began 1927. Known as the “Missionary Revival in China.” [*McDow and Reid say the dates are; 1925-1939AD, p. 18, “Firefall”].
|[1930AD] – Stephen Jeffreys dies.
|[1934-1997] –
John Wimber was born February 25, 1934 in Kirksville, Missouri, died November 17, 1997, he was a charismatic pastor and one of the founding leaders of the Vineyard Movement.
|[1935AD] – September 6, 1935, John G. Lake dies.
|[1936AD] – November 6, 1935, Billy Sunday dies.
|[1944AD] – Aimee Semple McPherson dies.
|[1947AD] – Rodney Smith, “Gypsy Boy,” dies.
|[1947AD] – Smith Wigglesworth dies, March 12, 1947.
|1949AD] –
Scottish Hibridean Islands Revival, Duncan Campbell. The Islands were converted miraculously.
|[1948-1952AD] – Mid-Twentieth Century Evangelical Awakening – Billy Graham, & Chuck Templeton. Healing and Latter Day Revivals – William Branham, Gordon Lindsay, Oral Roberts. [*McDow and Reid say this is 1949-1960AD, p. 18]
|[1951AD] – Evan Roberts dies.
|[1962AD] – George Jeffreys dies. (He nad his brother Stephen were coal miners before entering the ministry.
|[1962AD] – Beginning of the Charismatic Revivals
|| – Yale Revival – [1962]
|| – Dartmouth Revival – [1962-1964AD]
|| – Stanford Revival – [1962-1964AD]
|| – Princeton Seminary Revival – [1962-1964AD]
|[1960’s through the 1970’s] – Was known as the Charismatic Revival worldwide.
|[1967-1975AD] – The Jesus People Movement, [*McDow and Reid state this is the epicenter of the dates. p.18].
|[1970AD] – Asbury College, Kentucky. Spreads from this school to others.
|[1973AD] – Benny Hinn touched at a Kathryn Kuhlman meeting in Pittsburgh. December 1973. He states that he is forever changed.
|[1976AD] – Kathryn Kuhlman dies.
|[1976AD] – The home church that starts the Vineyard Movement. Ken Gullickson and John Wimber were the major founders and leaders.
|[1979-1982] –
USS BARRY REVIVAL
|[1980-1994AD] – East Coast for Jesus Ministries had revival services 12 times a week. Under Tom Smith, the Port St. Lucie, Florida church had many healings and manifestations. Stirrings of revival.
|[1982AD] – Carlos Annacondia began ministry. Now millions have accepted Christ primarily in Argentina and Latin America.
|[1983-1993AD] – Chestnut Street Revivals in Atlanta, GA under AJ Gill. Many healings and manifestations.
|[1990’s] – David Hogan (Mexico missions, dead raised, miracles and many churches started).
|[1992AD] – Beginning of the “Late 20th Century Revival.” A worldwide awakening.
|| – Some leaders were:
||| – Henry Blackaby, Canada
||| – John Wimber, California
||| – Claudio Freidzon in Buenos Aires, Argentina
||| – Rodney Howard Browne, United States
||| – John Arnott and Randy Clark, Toronto, Canada (January 20, 1994AD)
||| – John & Eleanor Mumford, England
||| – John Kilpatrick & Steve Hill in Pensacola, Florida, (Father’s Day 1995AD)
|[1992AD] – Argentine Revival Begins
|| – Leaders:
||| – Claudio Freidzon
||| – Hector Giminez – 120,000 in his church.
||| – Carlos Annacondia
||| – Omar Cabrera
|[1993AD] – Promise Keepers [in 1995, over 100,000 men attended a meeting at the Charlotte motor Speedway where thousands were converted and committed to holiness, chastity and moral pursuits!
|[1994AD] – Toronto Blessing started January 20, 1994 and was strong until about 1996 and slowed about 1998 due to complications related to an over focus on manifestations and issues when the Vineyard Association disassociated from the meetings.
|| – Leaders:
||| – Pastors – John & Carol Arnott
||| – Speaker – Randy Clark (Speaker when the Presence of GOD came).
||| – Arnott was hungered when at the Argentine Revival, he was touched through Kuhlman, touched through Benny Hinn, touched through Rodney Howard Browne. By 1996, the revival had spread to the Swiss, Germany, France, Sweden, Norway, England, Scotland, Canada, parts of the US and worldwide!
|[1994AD] – May 24, 1994 – Holy Trinity Brompton Revival hit after Eleanor Mumford went to Toronto.
|[1994AD] – Temple Baptist Church in Stony Point, NC.
|[1995AD] – January 1, 1995 – Melborne Revival in Florida. Randy Clark led. The Tabernacle (Church where it continued) Also went through radio station.
|[1995AD] – Wheaton College Revival – March 19,1995.
|[1995AD] – Taylor Campus Revival
|[1995AD] – Brownsville Assembly of GOD Revival. June 18, 2005 (Father’s Day Outpouring). Over 300,000 conversions by 1998 as it came to a close.
|[1996AD] – Latin America Revivals – “400 people per hour in Latin America were converting to Christianity,” Continued through the 1990’s. (Charisma Magazine report).
|[1997AD] – (2/15/1997) – Forest Fire ‘97 and the Campus Revivals
|[1997AD] – John Wimber dies, (November 17, 1997).
|[2001AD] – One Day – Passion, Louie Giglio and friends.
|[2003AD] – One Day 03 – Passion, Louie Giglio and friends.
2000
Present
___________________________________________________________________________
*Riss – Richard Riss from the Awakening Email List circa 1994-1997
*McDow – McDow & Reid, “Firefall”
*Bede – “Ecclesiastical History”
*Edwards -
*Gillies – “Narratives, Part I, II, III, IV, VIII & IV,” (1842)
*James S. Reid – “History of the Presbyterian Church in England,” Volume 1
*Humphrey -
*Hardman, “The Spiritual Awakeners,”
*Hardman, Susan Hayes Wald, “History of Broadway Tabernacle.”
*Fleming -
*Keith Hardman, “The Spiritual Awakeners,”
*Gladstone, “George Whitefield, MA, Field Preacher.
*Presbyterian Board of Publication, “Narratives of Revival of Religion, 1842, Part V.
*Slick – Basic Biblical Chronolgies Links by Matthew Slick,
www.carm.org/basicdoc.htm.
*Symbol denoting the end of a movement, revival, awakening or death of revivalist. {+}