Linford D. Fisher in the book, The Indian great awakening: Religion and the shaping of native cultures in early America, undertakes to rebuild a controversial past of what has been conventionally known as “the Indian Great Awakening” and which infers to that period in time when the native Indians in the New England converted to Christianity en masse in the 18th century. In his account, he challenges the notion that the native Indians wholeheartedly took to not only welcoming the white colonialists but also embraced their religion, Christianity. Instead, he argues that the socio-political situation that the native Indians found themselves in pushing them to take extreme measures so as to survive, including the strategic decision to embrace Christianity. All through the book he posits that the conversion to Christianity by the natives was more practical and provisional given the underlying circumstances at that given time. In an effort to clarify that the decision was not made out of goodwill, he undertakes to record in detail the various responses made by the native Indians to the religion, such as; the transition from rejection to adoption, and thus helping demonstrate the…