Wednesday, September 18, 2019
Examination of Puritan Philosophy in Bradfords On Plymouth Plantation :: essays research papers
 Examination of Puritan Philosophy in Bradford's "On Plymouth Plantation"      à  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  The Puritan people first came to the New World to escape the religious  persecution that hounded Non-Anglicans in England. They established the  Plymouth Colony in 1620, in what is now Massachusetts. The colony was a  reflection of the Puritans' beliefs. These beliefs, along with the experience  of establishing a colony in "the middle of nowhere", affected the writings of  all who were involved with the colony. In this writing, the Puritan philosophy  behind William Bradford's "Of Plymouth Plantation" will be revealed. Some  factors that will be considered include: how Puritan beliefs affect William  Bradford's interpretation of events, the representation of Puritan theology in  the above mentioned text, and how Puritanism forms the basis for Bradford's  motivation in writing.  à  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  In Bradford's text, there are numerous instances in which his beliefs  affect his interpretation of what happens. In Chapter IX (nine) of "Of Plymouth  Plantation", entitled "Of Their Voyageâ⬠¦" , he tells of a sailor "..of a lusty,  able body.." who "would always be condemning the poor people in their sickness  and cursing them dailyâ⬠¦.he didn't let to tell them that he hoped to help cast  half of them overboard before they came to their journey's end". But, "it  pleased God before they came half-seas over, to smite this young man with a  grievous disease, of which he died in a desperate manner, and so was himself the  first that was thrown overboard". Bradford believes that the sailor died  because God was punishing him. According to Bradford, the sailor's cursing, and  mistreatment of the other passengers displeased God, so God punished him  accordingly.  In the same chapter, Bradford tells of another ship passenger named John  Howland. At one point in the trip, the Mayflower came upon a violent storm.  The winds of the storm were so fierce, and the seas were so high, that all the  sailors and passengers had to "hull for divers days together". During this  storm, a young man named John Howland was thrown into the sea, and as Bradford  tells us, "it pleased God that he caught hold of the topsail halyards which hung  overboard and ran out at length". Howland caught hold of a rope, and "though he  was sundry fathoms under water", he held on until he was hauled up. Bradford  reasons that the man was saved because he was blessed by God. He goes on to say  that he "became a profitable member in both church and state, implying that John  Howland was one of the so called "Puritan Saints". To the Puritans, Saints were  people whom God was to save, so these people received God's blessings, and    					    
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