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Exploring Transformation: The Spiritual Journey of Elizabeth Cady Stanton

This piece delves into the early spiritual awakenings and struggles of Elizabeth, an infant Christian who felt remorse for her sins, earnestly sought redemption through prayer, and embraced faith in Jesus Christ. It juxtaposes her personal spiritual experience with broader societal issues, particularly the constraints women face as they navigate their identities. The text also discusses historical religious revivals and critiques pro-slavery perspectives, underscoring the complexity of faith, personal growth, and social justice.

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Exploring Transformation: The Spiritual Journey of Elizabeth Cady Stanton

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  1. APPARTS Reform Era

  2. The Infant Christianby Mrs. C. V. R. Hale • Elizabeth was only five years old. She may be called an infant Christian, judging from these three facts:- • First. She felt she was a sinner, and was sorry with a godly sorrowing: that is, she repented of her sins. Second. She came to the Lord Jesus, and asked him to save her from her sins: in other words, she prayed in sincerity. And, third, she believed in him, and loved him. Thus she had repentance toward God, and faith toward our Lord Jesus Christ.

  3. Elizabeth Cady Stanton • The woman is uniformly sacrificed to the wife and mother. • Woman's discontent increases in exact proportion to her development.

  4. The Second Great Awakening

  5. Fred Sanders • "Preachers from numerous denominations arrived, set up pulpits in tree stands, and preached; sometimes as many as seven preachers at once addressing different crowds throughout the woods. There was a lot of fainting, swooning, shouting, and dancing as the days went by."

  6. Study the image within the circle on the certificate. Explain how the drawing supports the Latin phrase, “Lux in Tenebris” (Light to Darkness).

  7. A Pro Slavery Letter by S. TrottNewspaper Article • Abolitionist, whether successful or not, is injurious to the slaves. It scatters discontent, and therefore unhappiness among them in their present state; it increases their insubordination, and thus subjects them to severer usage: should it free them from bondage, it would at the same time free their masters from the care of providing for them, and leave them an improvident class unprovided for, to suffer in rags and starvation, or under crime and its effects.

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