Alline was soon joined by others. Some, such as John Payzant, were converts through Alline's preachings, but others, such as William BLACK and his Methodist colleagues, apparently arrived at a similar point independently of Alline's "New Light" movement. Alline and his immediate followers accepted infant baptism, but many of those later involved rejected the concept as incompatible with the crisis conversion experience of being "born again." By the 1790s, when the movement had spread beyond NS into NB and PEI and even to the US, the main competition was between Methodists and BAPTISTS. The Great Awakening contributed to religious fragmentation in the Maritimes, and helped establish a regional inclination toward EVANGELICAL churches which remains characteristic. The revival never really ended, but ebbed and flowed throughout much of the 19th century as settlement spread.
Author J.M. BUMSTED
Links to Other Sites
The Christian Church Year
This site offers an introduction to the seasons of the Christian Church Year. Also explains the basis for special church tradtions throughout the year. From the CRI/Voice, Institute.

The Toronto Maple Leafs’ victory in the 1967 Stanley Cup was a singular event. Who would have predicted that it would not happen again?
INSIDE TCE
