Samuel Danforth’s election sermon of 1670 is a classic example of the New England jeremiad. Addressed to the assembled delegates on the occasion of the election of officers for the Massachusetts General Court, it asks the very pointed question: “What is it that distinguisheth New-England from other Colonies and Plantations in America?” The answer, of course, is that the Puritan colonies (Massachusetts, Plymouth, Connecticut, and New Haven) were founded for the pursuit of religious ends by the reformed Protestant churches of England: “You have solemnly professed before God, Angels and Men, that the Cause of your leaving your Country, Kindred and Fathers houses, and transporting your selves with your Wives, Little Ones and Substance over the ...
To celebrate the 200th anniversary of the Mayflower Pilgrims’ Landing at Plymouth Rock, Daniel Webst...
Presented here is Wigglesworth’s manuscript poem God’s Controversy with New-England (1871)—courtes...
Late in the year 1653, but under date of 1654, Nathaniel Brooke, a London publisher, at the Angel i...
Samuel Danforth’s election sermon of 1670 is a classic example of the New England jeremiad. Addresse...
Samuel Danforth’s election sermon of 1670 is a classic example of the New England jeremiad. Addresse...
Samuel Danforth’s election sermon of 1670 is a classic example of the New England jeremiad. Addresse...
In 1696 there appeared in Boston an anonymous 16mo volume of 56 pages containing four “epistles,” wr...
This edition of A Narrative of the Planting of the Massachusets Colony Anno 1628 is based on the fir...
This study focuses upon ministerial perceptions of the New England wilderness, as seen in sermons pr...
The paper analyzes early colonial representations of the New World, connected with immigration of th...
The work reprinted here, in an online electronic text edition, is Cotton’s famous farewell sermon pr...
John Davenport’s A Sermon Preach’d at the Election is a notable and fascinating document on numerous...
Sherwood’s most popular sermon is his much cited The Church’s Flight into the Wilderness: An Address...
To celebrate the 200th anniversary of the Mayflower Pilgrims’ Landing at Plymouth Rock, Daniel Webst...
This is an online edition of Scottow’s popular tract, published in Boston in 1691, based on the firs...
To celebrate the 200th anniversary of the Mayflower Pilgrims’ Landing at Plymouth Rock, Daniel Webst...
Presented here is Wigglesworth’s manuscript poem God’s Controversy with New-England (1871)—courtes...
Late in the year 1653, but under date of 1654, Nathaniel Brooke, a London publisher, at the Angel i...
Samuel Danforth’s election sermon of 1670 is a classic example of the New England jeremiad. Addresse...
Samuel Danforth’s election sermon of 1670 is a classic example of the New England jeremiad. Addresse...
Samuel Danforth’s election sermon of 1670 is a classic example of the New England jeremiad. Addresse...
In 1696 there appeared in Boston an anonymous 16mo volume of 56 pages containing four “epistles,” wr...
This edition of A Narrative of the Planting of the Massachusets Colony Anno 1628 is based on the fir...
This study focuses upon ministerial perceptions of the New England wilderness, as seen in sermons pr...
The paper analyzes early colonial representations of the New World, connected with immigration of th...
The work reprinted here, in an online electronic text edition, is Cotton’s famous farewell sermon pr...
John Davenport’s A Sermon Preach’d at the Election is a notable and fascinating document on numerous...
Sherwood’s most popular sermon is his much cited The Church’s Flight into the Wilderness: An Address...
To celebrate the 200th anniversary of the Mayflower Pilgrims’ Landing at Plymouth Rock, Daniel Webst...
This is an online edition of Scottow’s popular tract, published in Boston in 1691, based on the firs...
To celebrate the 200th anniversary of the Mayflower Pilgrims’ Landing at Plymouth Rock, Daniel Webst...
Presented here is Wigglesworth’s manuscript poem God’s Controversy with New-England (1871)—courtes...
Late in the year 1653, but under date of 1654, Nathaniel Brooke, a London publisher, at the Angel i...