New York Journal: Remembering the 1857 awakening, and looking for a “new sense of God” | Alisa Harris
This article first appeared on WORLD Magazine’s website on October 6, 2007.
What starts in New York City spreads around the country, for good or ill. Some 2,000 people gathered in Manhattan late last month to commemorate the good that had begun 150 years before.
On Sept. 23, 1857, Jeremiah Lanphier climbed the stairs to the third floor of a church on Fulton Street in lower Manhattan. He entered a deserted lecture room and at noon began to pray. Half an hour later, one man joined him. By 1:00, six men were praying. Soon thousands of men and women across the city were praying each day in a movement that became known as the Fulton Street Revival of 1857-1858.
In 1857, 30,000 unemployed men roamed the streets of New York. The economy was hurtling into financial panic: A New York life insurance company had just collapsed and British investors were withdrawing funds from U.S. banks. Positions on slavery were hardening and a city fueled by slave-raised commodities feared the prospect of civil war.
Lanphier, a businessman with (according to a contemporary) “indomitable energy and perseverance,” saw the anxious looks of the businessmen around him. He produced a flier that asked fellow New Yorkers to “stop and call upon God” for a few minutes each week at the church on Fulton Street. First meeting: six men. Second meeting: 10. Then 40. Then 100.
At the revival’s peak, 50,000 New Yorkers were praying daily across the city. Businesses closed during the noon hour to accommodate prayer. Stores, fire departments, music halls, and theatres became venues for prayer.
The meetings spread across the state and then the nation. The revival claimed 1 million converts and its influence rippled into the 20th century. Dwight L. Moody attended meetings in Chicago and then recruited 17 street urchins for his first Sunday school class. Seminary student Horace Underwood became a missionary to Korea, a country that now contains 30 million Christians. Christians started missions to the poor that are still going.
Today, financial district skyscrapers have swallowed the Manhattan that Lanphier walked. An apartment building that advertises “Smart, Sexy, Available” residences stands where the Fulton Street church once welcomed the weary. But the commemoration last month included prayer for another revival and the unveiling of a Lanphier statue.
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