no
Religious toleration was not practiced in Puritan communities in the 1600s. Puritans believed in a strict interpretation of Christianity and sought to create communities based on their religious beliefs. Those who did not conform to their beliefs were often persecuted or expelled from the community.
India
slavery was mentioned in The Bible
protestant than catholic then protestant etc it was like this because of the different rulers and their religious beliefs
peoples beliefs changed and also religious fights to compare with each other.
An iconoclast is a nonconformist radical person that has no respect for authority or tradition, that destroys religious icons and attacks peoples beliefs.
In the 1600s, Islam was widely practiced in the Sahel region; Timbuktu was a center of Islamic learning. Christianity was the major religion of Ethiopia.
Herodotus was a historian known as the "Father of History" and he described the various religious beliefs and practices of the peoples he encountered in his writings. He himself was likely a follower of the Greek pantheon of gods, but his own personal religious beliefs are not extensively documented.
General answer is Yes. However keep their "morals' out of schools , courts and governments.
One religious group that came to the new world were the Pilgrims, who arrived in Plymouth, Massachusetts in 1620 seeking religious freedom. Another group were the Puritans, who settled in Massachusetts Bay in the early 1600s to establish a religious community based on their beliefs.
religious persecution in the 1600s