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Religion in America. Differences. Europe Generally religion was determined by the ruler of the region (Catholic, Reformed, Anglican, Lutheran) Religious tolerance developed 18 th /19 th centuries, but obstacles remain America More diverse and tolerant (with exceptions)
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Differences • Europe • Generally religion was determined by the ruler of the region (Catholic, Reformed, Anglican, Lutheran) • Religious tolerance developed 18th/19th centuries, but obstacles remain • America • More diverse and tolerant (with exceptions) • More pragmatic/experiential in religion
Tensions in American religion • Freedom/tolerance vs. practice in public life • 1st Amendment: “Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof” • Unity vs. diversity • Pragmatism vs. intellectualism • Individual spirituality vs. group identity • Founding history vs. new events • Revelations, religious movements, waves of immigrants • Protestant vs. Catholic
America: A Religious Nation? • Yes • Higher average weekly church attendance (50-60%) than Europe • Religious motivation of colonists • Free practice of religion protected by 1st Amendment • And No • No one religion can be established by gov’t (1st Amendment) • Many founding fathers, like Jefferson, were Deists and favored natural religion • Jefferson created his own version of the Bible, cutting out miracle stories and supernatural elements (The Life and Morals of Jesus of Nazareth) • Thus, the Puritan story is different from the founding father’s vision and the Constitution
Puritans • Strict Calvinists in England • Persecuted by Anglican majority • [Catholics also persecuted by Anglican majority] • Set up their own religious society and gov’t • Winthrop • Uses Old Testament imagery (recalls God’s covenant with Israel) • Role is to be a witness to others
American Religion: Revivals • 1740s: First Great Awakening • Usually on frontier, where churches and ministers were rare • Gathering included songs, preaching, and “altar calls” • Purpose: conversion experience • Move people’s emotions