Answer:
-The First Great Awakening was a spiritual renewal movement that began in 1730s England and from there spread to the British colonies of North America. Jonathan Edwards was the leading theologian of the movement, that had a significant influence on Anglo-Saxon Christianity and has also resonated in other parts of Europe.
The Great Awakening involved mainly the various denominations of Calvinists, Congregationalists, Presbyterians, Baptists, and Anglicans. As it seemed to many, a formal approach to prayer prevailed in the colonies, and missionary activity among the Indians was completely neglected.
The outburst of religious sentiment in the colonies resulted in the rejection of the atheistic aspects of European Enlightenment. To preach their opinions, the “newborns” established several educational institutions, from which Dartmouth College and Princeton University subsequently grew.
-The Second Great Awakening, which took place from 1790 to 1840, was the second wave of religious revival in the United States of America and consisted of renewed personal salvation, which was experienced in faith revival meetings.
The movement encouraged an active evangelical attitude, which later broke out in American life through demands such as prison system reform, women's suffrage, abolitionist movement and others.