Parallel Lives of the Noble American Religious Thinkers Vs. Believers (e-bog) af Benson, William H.
Benson, William H. (forfatter)

Parallel Lives of the Noble American Religious Thinkers Vs. Believers e-bog

35,47 DKK (inkl. moms 44,34 DKK)
Roger Williams championed liberty of conscience. Cotton Mather promoted acts of kindness and doing good. Roger Williams was born in London but migrated to Boston and then to Salem, Plymouth, and finally to the town he founded, Providence, Rhode Island. Cotton Mather was born in Boston and never strayed from it. Both were trained Puritan ministers, but the young man Roger resigned from the minis...
E-bog 35,47 DKK
Forfattere Benson, William H. (forfatter)
Forlag Xlibris US
Udgivet 5 december 2014
Længde 668 sider
Genrer HB
Sprog English
Format epub
Beskyttelse LCP
ISBN 9781493118427
Roger Williams championed liberty of conscience. Cotton Mather promoted acts of kindness and doing good. Roger Williams was born in London but migrated to Boston and then to Salem, Plymouth, and finally to the town he founded, Providence, Rhode Island. Cotton Mather was born in Boston and never strayed from it. Both were trained Puritan ministers, but the young man Roger resigned from the ministry, saying it was "e;the best callings but (generally) they are the worst trades in the world."e;Instead, he made his living "e;trucking with the Indians."e; Cotton preached at his pulpit at Boston's Old North Church until seven weeks before he passed away. They both wrote books, especially Cotton, who wrote over four hundred. Alike and yet so different, the two men were thinkers and writers in America's early religious history. Author William H. Benson compares and contrasts Roger Williams and Cotton Mather in this, the first of six volumes of The Parallel Lives of the Noble American Religious Thinkers vs. Believers. Additional volumes will include: Thomas Paine and George Whitefield, Ralph Waldo Emerson and Joseph Smith, William James and Mary Baker Eddy, Mark Twain and Billy Graham, and H. L. Mencken and Jim Bakker.