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SGT English/Language Arts Teacher
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Edited 4 y ago
This was a very interesting article. I agree both sides are wrong. The Puritans only supported THEIR view of Christianity. They would pillory or ostracize any person or group that did not agree with them - ask Anne Hutchinson, Roger Williams, and the Quakers. Thomas Jefferson was definitely not a Christian but a deist. His Bible was cut and pasted where every supernatural occurrence was cut out of his Bible. Thomas Paine was absolutely not a Christian. Of course most of the new immigrants were Christians, but many were not tolerant of Native Americans or Catholics, let alone Jews. However, while many of our Founding Fathers were Christians, they were very leary of a state sponsored religion. My view is keep Church and State separate by honoring the 1st Amendment.
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Sgt Print Journalist
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Real Christian people heavily influenced this country for the good more than the bad from the get. Just as now.
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CWO3 Us Marine
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Edited 4 y ago
Many Scots immigrated to save their hides after the Jacobite uprising of 1745. Religion was least of their worries, as they migrated through GA to Appalachia. Highlanders.
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1SG Civil Affairs Specialist
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Many of the earliest settlers in the 13 colonies were fleeing persecution from the Church of England or Reformed Church. Quakers and the Pilgrims, to name two. Ensuring they would be able to worship as they wished was fundamental to the nation's founding, especially since the Constitution needed to be ratified by states with large populations of religious migrants from Europe.
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