A Reformation of Morals Practicable and Indispensable: A Sermon, Delivered at New-Haven, on the Evening of October 27, 1812

Beecher argues national moral reformation is difficult but practicable. He diagnoses obstacles—avarice, indifference, neutrality—and urges active reform against intemperance and Sabbath neglect.

Lyman Beecher was a prominent American Presbyterian minister, revivalist leader, and moral reformer who played a key role in the Second Great Awakening and helped found influential institutions including the American Temperance Society and the Lane Theological Seminary. He was widely known for his powerful preaching, prolific writings on theology and social issues, and for being the patriarch of a notable family including Harriet Beecher Stowe and Henry Ward Beecher.

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