The puritans were a group of people who worship God saying that the lord forgives all. Then they would turn around and used him for their own personal use. They would exile, kill, and torture people to death in the lord’s name. However, the ones behind all these acts weren’t just the colonist but also the priest! They were the ones in charge of everything that would happen in the colonies. The puritans were people who based their social lives, and government on their religious belief. Which lead me to belief that that church was the main underlying tension in the puritan community.
Puritanism was a religious movement that had arose within the Church of England in the late …show more content…
Everybody would be watching everybody, and then they would report back to the church. If they were ever to find something not to their likings. The church had took over everyone’s life. I controlled the way people raised the children, and what to teach them. They even had put blue laws in effect from children to face death if they were to ever misbehave. It’s no wonder children were so depress and grow up to be copies of the parents who were religious crazy. No matter what they did they always had somebody in their business. Then the Salem Witch trials had started and it had turned into an all-out man hunt. The trials had killed many innocent people. The trials were a series of hearings and prosecutions of people accused of witchcraft in Massachusetts. These trials caused everybody would be pointing their finger at everyone and putting the blame on other people. However, many people took this chance to get rid of people. No matter if it was the elderly or people who had fallen ill. The trials resulted in the executions of 20 people, most of them women. However, these trials came to end once the judge’s wife was accused of using witch craft. The trails had lasted for six months and twenty two days. These actions are what caused the puritan community to start falling apart. As the Puritan community grew and changed, it became clear that typological interpretations were neither stable nor