1 / 6

Pre-Colonial Literature

Pre-Colonial Literature. Puritanism. PRIMARY TENETS. ORIGINAL DEPRAVITY : we are all born sinners (original sin) LIMITED ATONEMENT : we can't change the fact that we are sinners IRRESISTIBLE GRACE : if we are chosen by God, it is beyond our earthly control

hollye
Download Presentation

Pre-Colonial Literature

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Pre-Colonial Literature Puritanism

  2. PRIMARY TENETS • ORIGINAL DEPRAVITY: we are all born sinners (original sin) • LIMITED ATONEMENT: we can't change the fact that we are sinners • IRRESISTIBLE GRACE: if we are chosen by God, it is beyond our earthly control • PREDESTINATION: God has chosen his elect before we are born • COVENANT THEOLOGY: to reconcile the contradictions of predestination and limited atonement: 1) one's status as "saved" could never be known; 2) one knew that the elect were good people

  3. POLITICAL PRINCIPLES • Colonial Puritanism is a militant, biblically based CALVINISTIC Protestantism • a.k.a. Reformed Tradition; Reformed Faith; reformer John Calvin • Known for predestination, total depravity; absolute sovereignty of God. • A COMPLETE REFORMATION both of religious and of secular life. • attacking the Anglican establishment in Great Britain • calling for a disciplined, godly life, and energetic evangelical activities. • a loose confederation of various DISSENTING SECTS • Emphasis was placed on • SELF-DISCIPLINE • INDIVIDUALISM • RESPONSIBILITY, WORK; • ASCETICISM an important influence upon the values and attitudes of the emerging middle classes. • main political objectives is the "PURIFICATION" OF CHURCH AND SOCIETY • the remnants of "corrupt" and "unscriptural" "papist" ritual and dogma -- which developed within the late sixteenth and early seventeenth century Church of England.

  4. SPIRITUAL VALUES • LITERAL AUTHORITY of the Christian Bible as a code for living. • SUCCESS: • In public and private life, they displayed open ambition, hard work, and an intense striving for SUCCESS. • In advancing their own profit and their community's well-being, they were also furthering God's plans. • SYMBOLS: To address the unpredictable nature of life, they consoled themselves in the belief that all things and events are symbols with deeper spiritual meanings. • WEALTH AND STATUS: were sought and praised as reassurances of spiritual health and promises of eternal life.

  5. TYPICAL WRITING • “CORRECT” WRITING • Good Puritan writing--or, rather, correct writing--encouraged the significance of WORSHIPPING GOD. • Colonial Puritan writing promoted these aims in the face of New World adversity and the heathenism of indigenous peoples. • DANGERS OF THE SOUL: The common motivation to take up the quill was to warn of the spiritual dangers that the soul faced on Earth. • VARIED STYLE in spite of the limite purpose of Puritan literature • metaphysical poetry • Sermons • religious histories. • RELEVANT PURITAN WRITERS • POETS: Richard Baxter; Anne Bradstreet; William Cowper; Ralph Erskine; John Newton; Edward Taylor; Michael Wigglesworth. • PROSE WRITERS and AUTHORS: Steven Charnock; Ebenezer Erskine; Thomas Goodwin; William Gouge; Mary Rowlandson; Samuel Rutherford; Thomas Sheperd; C.H. Spurgeon; Thomas Watson; Alexander Whyte; Samuel Willard; John Winthrop.

  6. LITERARY THEMES • LIFE AS A TEST: • Puritan life was a kind of romance or quest • failure meant eternal damnation and hellfire; success meant posthumous paradise. • The WORLD is an ARENA FOR THE BATTLE between the forces of God and the forces of Satan, a formidable enemy with many disguises. • The theme of the "MILLENNIUM” • prophesying the return of Jesus to Earth, an end to human misery • the beginning of a 1,000 years of PEACE AND PROSPERITY • USE OF BIBLICAL METAPHORS • In prose literature and sermons especially • Frequently used to explain the Puritan condition

More Related