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How Did Religion Influence The Salem Witchcraft Trials Of 1692

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Salem Village in Massachusetts was a normal town, with normal people, until the end of the 1600’s when a witchcraft epidemic drove on by fear took the lives of 19 people. Although people at the time thought these “witches” were working for the devil, it is now recognized that the trials were merely a product of the people’s environs. Most of the people in Salem attended a Congregational church where they learned about the punishment of God for a multitude of sins, including witchcraft. The Puritan church was very influential in the Salem Witchcraft Trials of 1692 because they believed they were taking a stand for their religious beliefs. This was specifically true in the case against Tituba, the Indian slave, owned by Reverend Samuel Parris.

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