Puritan ideals

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    Puritans were an important religious, social and political group which helped form the opinions, values and direction of the early American colonists. Thus, affecting the formation of our country. Among the most influential and prolific Puritan writers was William Bradford who impacted Colonial values and thinking. Puritan writers not only stirred the ideology of the people of the time but were important historians. The puritan style of writing was simple, logical and pongnant. Carefully selected

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    Introduction Thomas Paine was born to Joseph Paine and Francis Cocke Paine in January, 1737. Paine’s father was Quaker, and his mother was Anglican. The religious controversies haunted Paine throughout his life. His personal life ended in divorce and destitution. After barely avoiding debtor’s prison in 1774, a mutual friend introduced Paine to Benjamin. This introduction would change the course of Paine’s life. Franklin was immediately impressed with Paine and wrote a letter of introduction for

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    was home to a Puritan community whose ideals, values, and traditions were held in strict accordance to the teachings and laws of God. In order to maintain his or her public image, a Puritan man or woman would only dare to be seen or heard of doing religiously appropriate things. Those who failed to uphold the Puritan ideals were shamed, as is best shown by the enforcement of the “scarlet letter” upon Hester Prynne. However, as the story progresses, it can be questioned what the Puritans actually think

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    by the Puritans, who had emigrated from Britain and helped found most of the region’s colonies. The philosophies, ideas, and values of the Puritans greatly shaped the development of the colonies in a number of distinct ways. Politically, the idea of a united, representative government, which later became a staple of the United States, was derived from Puritan ideals. Economically, the ideals of fair pricing and the celebrated “Yankee frugality and thriftiness” originated from the Puritans. Socially

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    Given aboard the Arbella on his way to the New World, John Winthrop’s sermon to his fellow Puritans, A Model of Christian Charity, appears on the surface to be a simple proclamation of faith, a religious outline to help lead this new Puritan society through the unknown world that stands before them. It speaks to the traditional Puritan values of hard work and a commitment to God and Winthrop bases much of his message off of those timeless themes. However, hidden within Winthrop’s Christian rhetoric

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    for his ideal settlement, City Upon a Hill. He wrote down his ideas in a document titled “A Modell of Christian Charity”(Doc 1). In this document, he planned ideas for a perfect Puritan society. At the start of this settlement, he became the governor of it. These ideas and values were an important aspect of the political, economic, and social development of the Puritan society in New England. The most important values were community, religion, and education. These values that the Puritans upheld in

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    influenced by the Puritans, whom founded a majority of the New England and several Middle colonies. The Puritan philosophies and values formed and directed the progress of the colonies. Socially, strict emphasis on church and community was influential in other colonial settlements as well. Politically, unification and representation derived from the Puritans. Economically, ideas such as fair pricing originated through the Puritan minds. It is obvious that the ideas held by Puritans grasped the social

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    influence on modern culture today. Puritan literature is a dominant factor in American life and was a powerful cause in shaping American thought and in American literature. Puritan writers and scholars such as John Winthrop and Roger Williams presented ideas that were new at the time that stayed with the American consciousness. Ideas of freedom, authority, and the role of religion within the state have been an important argument among national debates. When the Puritans considered such ideas, their thoughts

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    William Bradford’s writing displays his Puritan faith by including many of their ideals throughout Of Plymouth Plantation. Bradford’s beliefs give his writing a simple and unembellished style, like that of Puritan dress. Furthermore, He demonstrates his faith by including the Puritan concept of election. Foremost, Bradford displays his faith by incorporating providence into his writing. For example, he infers that their trip across the Atlantic ended safely only through God’s intervention. Throughout

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    foundation of capitalism. Songwriters such as Stephen Foster, felt the American people needed an image to follow a need for Puritan mentality. Without a doubt, music purposely expressed these movements by the usage of musical lyrics to analyze the discrimination against African American slaves and the secession of the United States, which reflected the turmoil of the separated Puritan communities. In short, after the American Revolution, many Americans feared the idea of self-preservation within communities

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