"Pilgrims and puritans" Essays and Research Papers

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    Puritans and Sex

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    Puritans were often stereotyped as a strongly religious group that lacked humor and was very sexually repressed. Although they were strongly religious‚ they were still human beings. They knew sex was a human necessity and understood that fully. What they did was make vigorous strides to make sex before marriage illegal. In other words‚ they only wanted married couples to partake in sexual intercourse to honor the code of God. They came up with a number of laws to protect sexual misdemeanors such

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    The Rise Of The Puritans

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    England‚ the Puritans had been people of resources and political power‚ but King Charles did not accept their attempts to reform and restructured the Church of England (Anglican Church) to be more Protestant. In not following with their request to make the changes‚ they began to protest against the Church of England and its leaders‚ the English monarch and the parliament as well. When William Laud was chosen by Charles the first as Archbishop of Canterbury‚ who is pro-catholic and anti-puritan in 1630

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    Puritan Synthesis

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    Puritan Synthesis Puritans were European immigrants that had many beliefs. Some of the common beliefs were that only certain people could talk to God‚ and that God is mean‚ angry‚ and vengeful. People would often write Literature to express the way they view God‚ or to write a History that often has to due with themselves. Most Puritan Sermons‚ Histories‚ and Poems all include a Lesson throughout and Glorify their God. Both “Upon the Burning of our house‚” by Anne Bradstreet and “Sinners in

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    Puritan Essay

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    American Tradition The passage “In the genuine Puritan tradition‚ character and mortality are seen as permanent values achievable only by personal spiritual conquest‚ life is constantly spiritualized‚ and the humblest events and acts are related to a divine context.”‚ written by Kenneth B. Murdock‚ and in the book “The puritan Legacy”‚ is a statement said to describe the puritans. Within the textbook‚ many people of this century talk about the puritans‚ their way of living‚ and the accomplishments

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    Puritan Beliefs

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    Many cultures have the idea or lifestyle similar to a Puritan’s views; nevertheless making each culture have a similarity. Having a certain connection with god like the Puritans is basis of what Puritanism is about. It is required in the Puritan faith that you have a relationship with God and you recognize and regret that sins you have committed. There is a huge population in the world that has a christian/catholic mindset‚ they use the bible as ways to better themselves and the rules that God implements

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    The Puritan Dilemma

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    temptations is the sweetest‚ and will prove the safeste. For such tryalls as fall within compasse of our callinges‚ it is better to arme and withstande them than to avoide and shunne them. -John Winthrop There‚ in Winthrop’s own words‚ is the Puritan dilemma of which Mr. Morgan speaks here‚ "the paradox that required a man to live in the world without being of it." Superficially Puritanism was only a belief that the Church of England should be purged of its hierarchy and of the traditions and

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    Puritans and Sex

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    article‚ “Puritans and Sex” by Edmund S. Morgan‚ the author explains that contrary to popular belief‚ the Puritans openly acknowledged their natural human urge for sex and‚ while looking down upon sinful acts such as adultery and rape‚ regarded them only as “pardonable human weaknesses” (Morgan) that called only for prevention and very rarely for major punishment and furthermore found sex after marriage perfectly acceptable and even necessary for a functional society. The idea that Puritans were opposed

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    Puritan Beliefs

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    Question: In what ways did ideas and values held by Puritans influence the political‚ economic‚ and social development of the New England colonies from 1620 through the 1690s? The Puritan community positively and negatively influenced the New England colonies. When they first settled in America‚ they faced countless hardships that seemed to only increase their sense of religiosity. However‚ the colonies would not have been successful without them. Puritan beliefs helped to both introduce and spread

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    The Virginians were better off than the Puritans were‚ because they had tobacco for a cash crop‚ they had a longer growing season‚ and they could trade and sell to England easier than the Puritans could. The Virginians were also more loosely structured than the Puritans‚ and were allowed to be individual people instead of one large mass. Smith and Bradford’s ways of leading their colonies were similar‚ yet so very different. Smith’s main concern was to make money and

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    Puritans and Sex

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    In the article‚ “The Puritans and Sex”‚ author Edmund S. Morgan argues that the puritans were much more freethinking than their conservative stereotype. Most of what things said about the Puritans may have been exaggerated and just like all normal people in the world they would indulge in such things as sex and marriage. Of course according to laws in the 1630s when the Puritans were around‚ it was required that in order to indulge in such actions of “pleasure” you must first be married. Many male

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