The puritans
- Members of a religious reform movement known as the puritanism
- Arose within the Church of England
- Started in the 16th century
- They felt they had a direct covenant with God to enhance reform
- Extreme conservative fundamentalists
- Puritans – to purify
- The puritans had protestant beliefs, but took it to the extremes
- The arision of puritanism:
- Criticism of the catholic church: has too much political power <- highly criticised
- Rome was said to be corrupt -> protestants
- England: King Henry VIII eliminated catholicism, and created the ‘Church of England’ (WHY? Lad issues with his vifes, wanted to divorce)
- In the 17th century, more and more groups of worshippers separated themselves from the main body of their local parish church to follow an energetic “leader” instead (usually young man with a Cambridge degree were the new leaders) -> some congregations even separated from the main church (they were too extreme, too rigid)
- Because of fear, these groups (called themselves as ‘visible saints’) migrated to Massachusetts (and other places as well) -> the colonies of these strict, rigid, extreme religious people grew there
- The puritans were one of these groups -> Some puritans migrated to northern english colonies in the ‘New World’, in the 1620/30s <- since the puritans kept their focus on the importance of family, whole families migrated to New England in the US
- Pilgrims vs Puritans
- Pilgrims: separatists
- Puritans: they said they were not separatists, they did not repudiated the Church of England as a false church – but they actually acted as separatists
- Why puritanism? “Puritanism as a way of coping with the contradictory requirements fo Christian ethics on a world on the verge of modernity” – Max Weber
- 18th century:
- Puritanism declined, but showed its tenacity
- Puritans now: the word has a pejorative epithet, meaning prudish, constricted, cold-as
- Heritage of puritanism: Harvard, the region of Massachusetts