About This Book
The essay traces the religious lineage that produced the Pilgrims, identifying them as Separatists emerging from Puritan currents and earlier English reform movements. It outlines legal and ecclesiastical conflicts with papal authority, the spread of the English Bible, and shifting royal and clerical policies that alternately limited and promoted Protestant practices. The narrative shows how half-measures in reform and persistent controversies within the national church intensified dissent, highlights key reforming figures, and explains how these pressures led certain congregations to break away and form Separatist communities.
About the Author
More Books by This Author
1 picks
You May Also Like
6 picks
"'Tis Sixty Years Since" / Address of Charles Francis Adams; Founders' Day, January 16, 1913
by Charles Francis Adams
"1683-1920" / The Fourteen Points and What Became of Them—Foreign Propaganda in the Public Schools—Rewriting the History of the United States—The Espionage Act and How It Worked—"Illegal and Indefensible Blockade" of the Central Powers—1,000,000 Victims of Starvation—Our Debt to France and to Germany—The War Vote in Congress—Truth About the Belgian Atrocities—Our Treaty with Germany and How Observed—The Alien Property Custodianship—Secret Will of Cecil Rhodes—Racial Strains in American Life—Germantown Settlement of 1683 and a Thousand Other Topics
by Frederick Franklin Schrader
"America for Americans!" / The Typical American, Thanksgiving Sermon
by John Philip Newman
"Billy" Sunday, the Man and His Message / With his own words which have won thousands for Christ
by William T. Ellis
"Boots and Saddles"; Or, Life in Dakota with General Custer
by Elizabeth Bacon Custer
"Broke," The Man Without the Dime
by Edwin A. Brown
