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Puritanism Covenant and the Perfect Society in New England

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Puritanism Covenant and the Perfect Society in New England When the Puritans came to New England, they came to settle with a clear society in mind. Not only would this society be free from the persecution that they endured in Old England; it would be free to create what the leader of the religion referred to as a "perfect" society. In their attempt to escape the persecution they had come so accustomed to, they set up their own rigid belief system based on the inclusion of the human soul and the exclusion of everything else as being unimportant (Wolff 14). The belief system of the Puritans allowed for several different types of theologies, two of which are the Covenant theology and the Paradise theology. The Covenant Theology is, …show more content…

Mather's reinvention of the Puritan belief system at the time, helped stave off the changes that were occurring in England (744). Mather worked very hard to keep the Puritan way of life relatively untouched by the "new" religions that were being practiced in New England, keeping the promise of church discipline and church influence that the Church had made to its members (744) which led to "better educated, more orderly, and a more reasonable" congregation (740). Finally, there is the covenant between the Puritan and God. This promise also extends both ways, from the pious to God, and from God to the people who worship. The Puritan's promise to God was to believe in God's absolute sovereignty (Zaret 377). According to Zaret, John Calvin, a prolific Puritan leader, stated, "We dream not of a faith which is devoid of good works. Because we know that God regards not the outward appearance, we must penetrate to the very source of action, if we see how far works avail for righteousness" (376). Calvin even goes so far as to state that "‘salvation is no longer shrouded by the divine veil but illuminated for all determined to clasp it'" (381), leading the congregation to believe that God has shown them the path to Heaven, should they choose to follow it. However, the promise made by God to man is slightly less concrete, "God only does covenant … man is the party assumed" (380). This

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