Summary Of The Puritan Dilemma

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The Puritan way of life consisted of a magnitude of contradictions and paradoxes in regard to its beliefs and ideology. Both past and present day beliefs make Puritanism a challenge to those who follow it. In The Puritan Dilemma, by Edmund S. Morgan, the author writes about one of the more noted paradoxes in the Puritan religion. On page 27 he writes, “This was part of the same large paradox that had troubled Winthrop from the beginning, the paradox that required a man to live in the world without being of it.” This quote means that in the Puritan religion, you must live in the world, you cannot seclude yourself; but you cannot escape sin on the earth so you must not live of it, you must avoid it and stay aimed towards salvation. Even John Winthrop, one of the most …show more content…

Morgan explains, on page 64, that Winthrop felt the eyes of all people were upon the colony, watching to see if they would fail, and if they did, that they would bring shame to themselves, which would be letting God down. He refers to the people of Massachusetts Bay as God’s servants because in the eyes of the Puritans, you were doing everything to serve God, and to prove to yourself that you are of the elect. To be of the elect means to achieve salvation when you die. If you could live in this world, without being of it, you could achieve salvation. To Winthrop, Puritanism means living in the world, but not taking his mind off God. He cannot withdraw from the world. The world is full of sin, but you must not separate from it, which would be doing a disservice to God. This is why the Separatists troubled the Puritans. Separatists did not live in this world, or of it. Rather they separated from the world and let go of their duties to God. Winthrop and his fellow Puritans saw this as very sinful; God would want them to have stayed and tried to fix their church, rather than ‘give up’ and separate

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