Page 108 - History of Christianity - Student Textbook
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persecuted. Charles I of England made efforts to purge all Puritan influences from England, which resulted in the
              Great Migration to Europe and the American Colonies. The Pilgrims who formed the Massachusetts Bay Colony
              were separatist Puritans who had been forced out of England and Holland. Non-separatist Puritans who
              remained in England responded to this persecution with the English Civil War (1641-51), which led to the
              execution of Charles I, the exile of his son, Charles II, and the rise of Oliver Cromwell.

              Both America and Great Britain owe a great debt to the Puritans for the foundations they laid that gave them
              the framework for their freedoms today. Philosophies such as the “divine right” of kings gave way to individual
              liberties and the recognition of the rights of the common man. The “Yankee work ethic” came about because of
              the belief that a man's work is done first for God's approval. The belief in public education comes from the
              Puritans, who founded the first school in America (Roxbury, 1635), as well as the first college (Harvard, 1639), so
              that people would be able to read the Bible for themselves. The moral foundations of the early United States
              came from the emphasis on godly behavior by Puritan leaders. Even Alexis de Tocqueville, after studying
              America in the 1830s, declared that Puritanism was the primary foundation that gave rise to America’s
              democratic republic.
              (https://www.gotquestions.org/Puritans-Puritanism.html)

                                  Puritanism


















              The First (1735 – 1743) and Second Great Awakening (1795-1830)

              The First Great Awakening (c. 1735-1743) and the Second Great Awakening (c.1795-1830) were theologically
              significant in that they helped to shape Christian thinking by the intense revivalism they created. Each had
              leaders who were noteworthy in history, with Jonathan Edwards and George Whitefield being two of the
              prominent names in the First Great Awakening, and Nathaniel Taylor and Charles Finney in the Second Great
              Awakening.

              Whitefield and Edwards believed churches should be organized to be entirely
              distinct from New England governments. They preached that salvation was only
              of God and that humans did not possess any ability whatever toward salvation;
              it came only as a result of God’s saving call. In other words, man’s
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