Worlds of Wonder, Days of Judgment: Popular Religious Belief in Early New England

Front Cover
Harvard University Press, 1990 - History - 316 pages
This book tells an extraordinary story of the people of early New England and their spiritual lives. It is about ordinary people--farmers, housewives, artisans, merchants, sailors, aspiring scholars--struggling to make sense of their time and place on earth. David Hall describes a world of religious consensus and resistance: a variety of conflicting beliefs and believers ranging from the committed core to outright dissenters. He reveals for the first time the many-layered complexity of colonial religious life, and the importance within it of traditions derived from those of the Old World. We see a religion of the laity that was to merge with the tide of democratic nationalism in the nineteenth century, and that remains with us today as the essence of Protestant America.
 

Contents

THE MEETINGHOUSE
3
THE USES OF RITUAL
166
THE MENTAL WORLD OF SAMUEL SEWALL
225
Afterword
239
A Note on Book Ownership in SeventeenthCentury
247
Index
301
Copyright

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About the author (1990)

David D. Hall is John A. Bartlett Professor of New England Church History at Harvard Divinity School.

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