Count Nikolaus Ludwig von Zinzendorf was from a noble German family. 
 While on his "Grand Tour," in which young aristocrats were introduced to  royal courts around Europe, 
Count Zinzendorf viewed in the Dusseldorf museum a  painting by Domenico Feti depicting Christ's suffering.   
 
  The painting, titled 
"Ecce Homo" ("Behold the Man"), had a caption  underneath, 
"This have I done for you-Now what will you do for me?" 
 Young 
Count Zinzendorf was moved in a profound way.  
 
  Convicted, 
Count Zinzendorf came to an intensely personal faith in Christ, an  experience which was part of a revival movement labeled 
"Pietism."  In 1722, 
Count Zinzendorf opened up his estate at Berthelsdorf, Saxony, for  persecuted Christians of Europe to come and live together.   
 
  People arrived from Moravia, Bohemia (Czech Republic) and other areas, and built a village on his estate called 
"Herrnhut," which means "The Lord's Watchful Care."  
 
  When they started disagreeing amongst themselves, 27-year-old 
Count  Zinzendorf began a prayer meeting, August 13, 1727.
This prayer meeting went on
 24  hours a day, seven days a week, and, with believers taking turns, 
went on uninterrupted for over 100 years.    Count Zinzendorf
  Count Zinzendorf stated:   
 "I have one passion: it is Jesus, Jesus only."
 More 
Moravian missionaries were sent out from Herrnhut in the next 20 years than all Christendom had in the previous 200 years.   
 Moravian
  Moravian missionaries went all over the world: 
 to Greenland,  
 to the West Indies,  
 to American Indians,  
 to the northern shores of the Baltic,  
 to the slaves of South Carolina,  
 to Suriname,  
 to slaves in South America,  
 to Tranquebar and Nicobar Islands in the East Indies,  
 to the Copts in Egypt,  
 to the Inuit of Labrador, and  
 to the west coast of South Africa.  
 Get the book America's God and Country Encyclopedia of Quotations  Moravian missionaries
Get the book America's God and Country Encyclopedia of Quotations  Moravian missionaries sailed to the colony of Georgia in America.

Caught in a terrible storm, the 
Moravian missionaries confidently sang praise to the Lord.
Their faith made a tremendous impact on two other frightened passengers on that ship, namely, John and Charles Wesley. 
 John Wesley
 John Wesley was being sent to be the Anglican minister in the Colony of Georgia, at the settlement on St. Simon Island; 
and 
Charles Wesley was sent to be the secretary of Georgia's founder James Oglethorpe. 
 
 The Wesley brothers returned to England where they later founded the 
Methodist revival movement.     
  Through the Wesleys, the Moravian influence was felt by 
George   Whitefield, who helped lead the 
Great Awakening Revival in the American   colonies.   
 
  In 1741, 
Count Zinzendorf visited America, hoping to unify the various German Protestants churches in Pennsylvania.  
 On Christmas Eve, 1741, 
Count Zinzendorf founded Bethlehem, Pennsylvania.   
 
  There his daughter, Benigna, organized a school which became 
Moravian College.   
 Count Zinzendorf
  Count Zinzendorf traveled with the German Indian agent and interpreter   
Conrad Weiser into the wilderness to share his faith with Iroquois   Indian chieftains, making 
Zinzendorf one of the few European noblemen to   meet with Indians in their villages.   
 Conrad Weiser's  daughter
  Conrad Weiser's  daughter married a young German minister, 
Henry  Muhlenberg, one of the  founders of the Lutheran Church in America.     
 Henry Muhlenberg
  Henry Muhlenberg became pastor of fifty German families at the Old Trappe Church in Pennsylvania, December 12, 1742. 
 In 1751, 
Henry Muhlenberg founded Trinity Lutheran Church in Reading, Pennsylvania.  
Henry Muhlenberg was influenced by the 
Pietist movement within   Lutheranism which stressed a personal relationship with Christ in addition to adhering to orthodox doctrine. 
 Pietism
  Pietism had a political consequence similar to 'separation of church and state'. 
 Whereas 
Calvinist Puritans believed God had a will for everything   including government and it was a Christian's duty to put God's Will in place;
Pietists, on the other hand, believed that when someone believed in Christ their life should change and they should not participate in worldly distractions such as bars, theaters, and ... government.  
 
  It was  therefore a major step for Henry Muhlenberg's son, 
John Peter   Muhlenberg, pastor of Emanuel Church in Woodstock, Virginia, to join   General George Washington's army as a colonel, with 300 members of his   church forming the 8th Virginia Regiment.  
 John Peter Muhlenberg
  John Peter Muhlenberg was promoted to Major-General in the Continental Army, then elected to the U.S. Congress and Senate. 
 
 Henry Muhlenberg's other son,
 Frederick Augustus Muhlenberg, was pastor of a Lutheran congregation in New York.  
 Frederick Muhlenberg
  Frederick Muhlenberg became active during the Revolution and afterwards   was elected to the U.S. Congress, being the first Speaker of the U.S.   House of Representatives.  
 
  Both 
John Peter and Frederick were members of the First Session of U.S. Congress which passed the 
First Amendment. As Speaker of the House, 
Frederick Muhlenberg's is the only signature on the Bill of Rights which limited the power of the Federal Government. 
 American Minute - Notable Events of American Significance Remembered on the Date They Occurred
 American Minute - Notable Events of American Significance Remembered on the Date They OccurredPastor 
Henry Melchior Muhlenberg, who died OCTOBER 7, 1787, wrote of    General George Washington at Valley Forge in 
The    Notebook of a Colonial Clergyman:  
 
  "I heard a fine example   today, namely that His Excellency General  Washington rode around among   his army yesterday and admonished each to  fear God, to put away   wickedness...and to practice Christian virtues."  
 
  Rev. 
Henry Muhlenberg continued: 
 "From all appearances 
General Washington does not belong to the    so-called world of society, for he respects God's Word, believes in the    atonement through Christ, and bears himself in humility and  gentleness. 
 Therefore, the Lord God has also singularly, yea,  marvelously preserved   him from harm in the midst of countless perils,  ambuscades, fatigues,   etc., and has hitherto graciously held him in  his hand as a chosen   vessel." 
PRAYERS AND PRESIDENTS