During the seventeen-century, there were different types religious based colonies. One was the Pilgrims and the others were the Puritans. Their believes were very different. They traveled to America during 1620 for a better life. They were many things that the Pilgrims and Puritans religious did to influence their settlement in North America. It all started when the Puritans and the Pilgrims no longer want to follow the rules of the catholic church. They both disagreed with the church and believed it remained to catholic. The pope disaproved of letting the Puritans and the Pilgrims have their own beliefs. They eventually found a way and decided to leave to the “new world” or as we call it today America where they has freedom of religion. …show more content…
They lacked rituals and sacraments. They agreed that men were weak; that they created sin. According to the Puritans God expected them to follow and live life according to the scriptures.2 and that he would protect them if they obeyed the laws.1 Unlike the Pilgrims the Puritans were not separatists, which meant that they wanted to reform their beliefs, but within the church. The Pilgrims on the other hand, wanted to separate completely from the church and start their own churches. They believed that the worship of God had to progress from the individual that “God predestined to make the world, man, and all things as well as who would be saved and who would be damned”(Belivers). The main similarity between the Pilgrims and the Puritans had been that they both disagreed with the church.
The movement of these colonies created a big impact on North America. That being said, these coloniest were the first religions that carved our first states. They helped shape some of the states that we know of today. The Puritans contributed to finding new colonies such as Rhode Island, Pennsylvania, New Jersey, Deleware, and New Hampshire and others.3 The Pilgrims also contributed a big impact on North America. They played a major role in forming our current government which became a sybmbol of democracy as well as religious