A Summary Of Roger Williams And The Pilgrims

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In 1620, seeking refuge from persecution in Europe, William Bradford and his small colony of one-hundred and three Protestant separatists, later known as the Pilgrims, arrived in New England to found Plymouth Plantation. Winthrop established the Massachusetts Bay Colony, now known as Boston, as a theocracy, where elected leaders such as Winthrop himself made decisions with the advice of the clergy based of their belief of pre-destination and enforced strict religious laws upon all people who lived in the colony. Although most of those who migrated to America in 1630 shared a common Calvinist theology, there was by no means unanimity regarding how they would practice their religion. Two prominent figures soon brought dissent among the community; first, Anne Hutchinson spread her sharp challenge to the Puritan faith by spreading the idea that a holy life was no sure sign of salvation and to not bother with obeying the law of either God or man; second, Roger Williams urged …show more content…

Williams was a young man but had several of radical ideas and an unrestrained tongue. He saw the Church of England as being too corrupt and preached emphatically for his fellow faithful to separate from them entirely. In addition, he challenged the role of the clergy in political and judicial issues as he believed in the separation of church and state. Williams denying the authority of the Puritan’s civil government control over religious behavior was seen as a very seditious act. Lastly, he challenged the role of the clergy in political and judicial issues as he believed in the separation of church and state, and he deeply opposed the taking of land from the Native peoples without compensation. His debates with John Cotton led Williams to leave Massachusetts and establish a colony in Rhode

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