Benjamin Franklin was exceptionally dedicated to his religion in the ways he practiced his morality. He made a list of thirteen ideals which he lived by faithfully and recorded his progress to comply with the virtues. Franklin held a solid confidence in god as wellspring of morality and goodness in men. He taught that the Bible demonstrated that all men are equal, and that the genuine value of man lies in their ethical conduct, and that all men can be saved. Jonathan Edwards trusted that we witness our natural morality in examples of seeing beauty of the good and ugliness of the evil. He trusted morality was a sensual understanding of allure and couldn't help …show more content…
He had a guarantee to showing the Puritan values and passed his qualities into the American society through his publications and common work. Franklin saturated in Puritanism and was an eager supporter of the evangelical movement. He dismisses salvation dogma, yet grasped radical idea of egalitarian democracy. In spite of the fact that he had his own particular beliefs, he respected and elevated all houses of worship to speak freely. He had faith in the advancement of humankind and the impact of science. He didn't specify numerous Puritans thoughts as respects to religious dogma, the study of Jesus, and the belief in salvation. Indeed, even after his declaration of being a deist, despite everything he conceded that he trusted himself to be a Christian