puritanic - définition. Qu'est-ce que puritanic
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Qu'est-ce (qui) est puritanic - définition

SUBCLASS OF ENGLISH REFORMED PROTESTANTS
Puritanism; Puritanical; English Puritans; Puritain; Puritan party; Visible saints; Puritanic; Puritanically; Puritanist; Puritanists; Puritanistic; Puritanistical; Puritanistically; Puritanisms; Puritians; Puritan; Puritan movement; Separatist Puritans
  • The [[Westminster Assembly]], which saw disputes on Church polity in England (Victorian history painting by [[John Rogers Herbert]]).
  • Polemical [[popular print]] with a ''Catalogue of Sects'', 1647.
  • [[Cotton Mather]], influential New England Puritan minister, portrait by [[Peter Pelham]]
  • ''[[Pilgrims Going to Church]]'' by [[George Henry Boughton]] (1867)
  • Interior of the [[Old Ship Church]], a Puritan [[meetinghouse]] in [[Hingham, Massachusetts]]. Puritans were [[Calvinists]], so their churches were unadorned and plain.
  • Quaker [[Mary Dyer]] led to execution on [[Boston Common]], 1 June 1660, by an unknown 19th century artist
  • Death's head, [[Granary Burying Ground]]. A typical example of early [[Funerary art in Puritan New England]]
  • Commonwealth of England, Scotland, and Ireland]]
  • ''The Puritan'']], a late 19th-century sculpture by [[Augustus Saint-Gaudens]]
  • 1659 public notice in [[Boston]] deeming Christmas illegal
  • John Howe]] and [[Richard Baxter]]
  • 19th-century portrayal of the burning of William Pynchon's [[banned book]] on Boston Common after it was deemed blasphemous by the Massachusetts Bay Colony.
  • ''The Snake in the Grass or Satan Transform'd to an Angel of Light'', title page engraved by [[Richard Gaywood]], ca. 1660

puritanic         
a.; (also puritanical)
Strict, rigid, ascetic, over-scrupulous, prim, strait-laced, precise in religious matters.
Puritanic         
·adj ·Alt. of Puritanical.
puritanical         
a.

Wikipédia

Puritans

The Puritans were English Protestants in the 16th and 17th centuries who sought to purify the Church of England of Roman Catholic practices, maintaining that the Church of England had not been fully reformed and should become more Protestant. Puritanism played a significant role in English history, especially during the Protectorate.

Puritans were dissatisfied with the limited extent of the English Reformation and with the Church of England's toleration of certain practices associated with the Roman Catholic Church. They formed and identified with various religious groups advocating greater purity of worship and doctrine, as well as personal and corporate piety. Puritans adopted a Reformed theology, and in that sense they were Calvinists (as were many of their earlier opponents). In church polity, some advocated separation from all other established Christian denominations in favour of autonomous gathered churches. These Separatist and Independent strands of Puritanism became prominent in the 1640s, when the supporters of a presbyterian polity in the Westminster Assembly were unable to forge a new English national church.

By the late 1630s, Puritans were in alliance with the growing commercial world, with the parliamentary opposition to the royal prerogative, and with the Scottish Presbyterians with whom they had much in common. Consequently, they became a major political force in England and came to power as a result of the First English Civil War (1642–1646). Almost all Puritan clergy left the Church of England after the restoration of the monarchy in 1660 and the 1662 Uniformity Act. Many continued to practice their faith in nonconformist denominations, especially in Congregationalist and Presbyterian churches. The nature of the movement in England changed radically, although it retained its character for a much longer period in New England.

Puritanism was never a formally defined religious division within Protestantism, and the term Puritan itself was rarely used after the turn of the 18th century. Some Puritan ideals, including the formal rejection of Roman Catholicism, were incorporated into the doctrines of the Church of England; others were absorbed into the many Protestant denominations that emerged in the late 17th and early 18th centuries in North America and Britain. The Congregational churches, widely considered to be a part of the Reformed tradition, are descended from the Puritans. Moreover, Puritan beliefs are enshrined in the Savoy Declaration, the confession of faith held by the Congregationalist churches.