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Asahel Nettleton

Asahel Nettleton (April 21, 1783 – May 16, 1844) was an American preacher and evangelist whose leadership in the Second Great Awakening shaped evangelical Calvinism in the early 19th century with a focus on sober, effective revivalism. Born in North Killingworth, Connecticut, to Samuel Nettleton, a farmer, and Sarah Sage, he was the second of six children in a devout Congregationalist family. A conversion experience at 18, sparked by contemplating death during farm work in 1801, led him to study at Yale College, graduating in 1809 despite financial struggles. Licensed to preach in 1811, he chose itinerant evangelism over a settled pastorate, beginning his ministry in Connecticut’s “waste places”—unrevived churches—before gaining fame across New York, Massachusetts, and beyond. Nettleton’s preaching, marked by quiet intensity and theological depth rather than theatrical excess, ignited revivals credited with 25,000 to 30,000 conversions, notably during the 1818–1821 awakenings in Connecticut and New York. Opposing Charles Finney’s “new measures” like anxious benches, he emphasized God’s sovereignty and human repentance, as seen in his defense of traditional methods in the 1827 New Lebanon Conference. His hymns, including “Come Holy Ghost My Soul Inspire,” and sermon collections like Village Hymns (1824) bolstered his influence. Health failing from typhoid in 1822, he never married, living with friends like Bennet Tyler until tuberculosis claimed him in East Windsor, Connecticut, at 61.