How Did The First Great Awakening Influence The Lifestyle Of Puritans

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Puritans had their way of living their life and having their own beliefs. They even had their own way of how to dress, talk, and act. They adopted strict standards for admissions to their churches.
The lifestyle of Puritans expectancy grew much longer than Old England and Southern English colonies. They wanted their children to be able to read the bible and be able to go to school. Men were basically in charge and women weren’t able to participate in town meetings and were denied to make any decisions in the church. They had lists on how they view women and how they acted, even when they were pregnant. It was mandatory for puritans to go to church; if they missed they had to be fined. Their law was so strict that they believed they were doing …show more content…

The Great Awakening means the series of religious revivals among Protestants in the American colonies, especially in New England, that lasted about 1725 to 1770. It was best described as a revitalization of religious piety that swept through the American colonies. The First Great Awakening appeared among Presbyterians in Pennsylvania and New Jersey. Religious enthusiasm was quickly spread from the Presbyterians of the middle colonies to the Congregationalists, also known as the puritans, and Baptists of New England. It also gained impetus from the wide-ranging American travels of an English preacher, George Whitefield (Christine Leigh Heyrman). The puritans were a varied group of religious reformers who emerged within the Church of England. They shared a common Calvinist theology and common criticisms of the Anglican Church and English society and government. Puritans sought to cleanse the culture of what they regarded as corrupt, sinful practices. The puritans believed that the civil government should strictly enforce public morality. They also wished to purge churches of every vestige of Roman Catholic ritual and practice. They adopted even stricter standards for admission to their churches so that each person applying for memberships testify publicly to his/her experience of conversion. Their experience is a surefire way to get students thinking and talking, meaning no matter how confused they seem at first most of them will either get it or get into it. They believe that by a profound sense of inner assurance that they possessed God’s saving grace for hope. In the Calvinist scheme they thought God decided who would be saved or not before the beginning of history and that the decision wouldn’t be affected by how human beings behaved during their lives. The Calvinist encouraged students to shift from talking about why puritanism doesn’t appeal to them and how it appealed to so many