The Quakers have always been outside of the mainstream of Christianity, and that may not be a bad thing!
The Puritans' emphasis on materialism and sexual repression has in a way continued in modern day mainstream Christianity.
The religious group was called puritan because they were supposed to be "pure." They had very strict rules about religion and did not let their people change religions. In a way, they were somewhat the exact opposite of Quakers. Puritans were sometimes flogged if they did something wrong.
the Connecticut colony was started by puritans who started the congregational church which was a protestant religion similar to calvanist
Mormon pioneers left their homes and traveled to a wild land to settle new colonies where they could practice their religion in peace, just like the Puritan pilgrims.
Any colony that was started for religious freedom was started for the same reason as the Massachusetts Bay colony and the Pilgrims.
No they were not they were very intolerant! A bit of background: The Puritans of 16th and 17th-century England s advocating for more "purity" of worship and doctrine, and a strict code of personal and group piety. They felt that the English Reformation had not gone far enough to purge practices associated with the Catholic Church. Puritans were the extremists of the protestant church along with similar European groups. They did not cooperate with Presbyterians in England and advocated for separation from all other Christians, in favor of churches under their control.
The Puritans of Pennsylvania were called Quakers. The Quakers were a group with very similar beliefs that broke off from the Puritan church.
New York was very similar to Massachusetts, but under a slight influence from Pennsylvania, in terms of religion, it was a colony where Separatists (Pilgrims), Quakers and Puritans established their respective beliefs.
New York was very similar to Massachusetts, but under a slight influence from Pennsylvania, in terms of religion, it was a colony where Separatists (Pilgrims), Quakers and Puritans established their respective beliefs.
The Puritans and Quakers both held onto their religions very strongly and wanted to follow God in their own ways. They also both came to be because they didn't want to conform to the Church of England. So, even though the Quakers and Puritans were very different and persecuted each other for their beliefs, they were alike in some ways. Sincerely, Kirsten, an eighth grader:)
The religious group was called puritan because they were supposed to be "pure." They had very strict rules about religion and did not let their people change religions. In a way, they were somewhat the exact opposite of Quakers. Puritans were sometimes flogged if they did something wrong.
puritans in England /dissenter sin new England how are the similar
A word that similar to Puritans is Shakers.
No, but they are historically related. Puritans preceded Quakers in the religious ferment of Britain's 17th century. Both groups rejected state-church enmeshment and episcopal governance; 17th-century Quakers went on to reject prayerbooks, outward ceremonies of all kinds, military service, and a paid priesthood. Nevertheless, both groups agreed on the central role of the Bible and on the importance of a disciplined life. Quakers: Religious Society of Friends: a Christian sect founded by George Fox about 1652; commonly called Quakers. Puritans: A dissenting movement within British Protestantism that developed in the late 1500s. Puritans settled in the New England area in the early 1600s. Characterized by strict focus on the Bible and the authority of God, both personally and socially, severe restraint in behavior, and hard work. Early American Puritans saw nature as "a hideous and desolate wilderness" to be walled off or controlled and tamed. Later Puritans, such as Jonathan Edwards, began to see beauty in nature as a manifestation of God. Definitions quoted from Related Links.
Not good
there where fair
We believe similar things to mainstream Christans exept things like we will be born again and things like that.we also dont make you pay you can just give contrubutions and we believe in the paradise where we will be ressurected Rev 21 4; Jehovahs Witnesses are a branch of Christianity
They're similar in the fact that they have one god (Allah in Islam, Yahweh in Christianity.)