Puritansthe puritans were strict about religion and life styles, the puritans booted out anybody who did not believe the same things they believed. Puritans had church services and officials or priests, puritans were not pacifistsQuakersthe Quakers lived a little more freely. the Quakers took in peoples beliefs, officials and church services were not necessary, Quakers were pacifistsBesides those I can't find any other answers....hoped it helped.
Puritansthe puritans were strict about religion and life styles, the puritans booted out anybody who did not believe the same things they believed. Puritans had church services and officials or priests, puritans were not pacifistsQuakersthe Quakers lived a little more freely. the Quakers took in peoples beliefs, officials and church services were not necessary, Quakers were pacifistsBesides those I can't find any other answers....hoped it helped.
The main objection among Puritans to the Church of England was the importance it attached to 'the Church, the ministry and the sacraments'. ('Ministry' here means priests and bishops). Puritans didn't like top-down church government and regarded the zest of some Anglicans for ritual as closet Roman Catholicism. Only a minority of Puritans wanted membership of the Church confined to those showing 'visible signs of regeneration (rebirth)'. Even these Puritans were often willing to accept some other members. Many Puritans still hoped for a national church, and that implied a broadly based church. Please bear in mind that there were differences among the Puritans; they were not a monolithic group.
The Puritans .
No. It was the Parliamentarians who were Puritans.
.Catholic AnswerIt was in the 17th century that the Puritans, out of fear forbid Catholic Priests, from the website "Mass moments" (link below):...in 1647, Massachusetts Bay banned Jesuit priests from the colony on penalty of death. The English Puritans who settled the colony feared the Jesuits for several reasons. First, simply because they were Catholic. To Puritans, Catholicism was nothing less than idolatrous blasphemy, and Catholics were destined for eternal damnation. Second, because the Jesuits were French, and France and England were engaged in a bitter struggle for control of North America. Finally, Jesuit missionaries had converted large numbers of Indians in Canada to Catholicism. Indian converts were potential allies of France and enemies of the English. Although no Jesuit was executed for defying the ban, the legacy of anti-Catholicism in Massachusetts survived for generations.
The Puritans.
puritans
the puritans beat the church of england.
Most Puritans were farmers.
The puritans :3
puritans didnot sing