Church History: English Puritanism, pt. 2
Posted in Ecclesiology, People, Wednesday Night and tagged Act of Supremacy, Act of Uniformity, Admonition to Parliament, Anglican Church, Arminianism, Book of Common Prayer, Calvinism, Cavaliers, Charles I, Christians, church history, Church of England, Connecticut, divine right of kings, Dutch Republic, Elizabeth I, Elizabethan Religious Settlement, Europe, France, Gainsborough, Germany, Grand Remonstrance, Hampton Court Conference, Henrietta Maria, high church, history, House of Commons, Ireland, James I, Jamestown, John Owen, John Pym, John Robinson, John Smyth, King James Bible, Lewis Bayly, London, Lutheranism, Massachusetts Bay, Mayflower, Mayflower Compact, Mennonites, Millenary Petition, New Haven, New Model Army, New World, non-comformists, Of Plymouth Plantation, Oliver Cromwell, Parliament, Parliamentarians, persecution, Pilgrims, Plymouth, Pope, Practice of Piety, Presbyterian Covenanters, Puritans, Rhode Island, Richard Bancroft, Richard Baxter, Roman Catholic, Roundheads, Royalists, Scottish Covenanters, separatists, The Rump, Thomas Helwys, Virginia, Westminster Assembly, Westminster Confession, William Bradford, William Brewster, William Laud