Cotton Mass "Salem Witch Trial," This sentence is not often heard in everyday conversation. Hanging in perhaps the most humanitarian way of burning a witch or in a bucket's water sinking in crisis. During this period of American history, people can generally be thought of as ridiculous and unreasonable ideas going astray going to be possible how how everyday these extortion of these horrifying humans It is a prudent example of how to make sure that means.
Mather was born in Boston, Massachusetts Bay Colonies · Maria (cotton) and sons Mather, Meiser, John Cotton and Richard's grandchildren have increased, they are the names of pastor Puritan. To his grandfather Mather named John Cotton. He studied at the Boston-Latin School where his name was added to the Hall of Fame, and graduated from Harvard University at the age of 15 in 1678. After completing the graduate work, he joined the Episcopal Church / Episcopal Church, Paul · Libya's old fame and the North Boston Primeval Church (a pastor of a middle assistant, his father joined.) In 1685, Mather I assumed full assumption as a pastor of the church Responsibility: 8
Cotton pad (1662/3 to 1727/8). New England's eldest son, Max's spiritual founder, Richard Mather and John Cotton, studied at Harvard University and received an honorary doctorate from the University of Glasgow (1710). Year). As a pastor of the second church (congregation) Boston became a political spotlight of the US version of Boston's revolutionary revolution which he was dismissed by his royal executive sir Edmund Andros (April 1689). During the collapse of magic (1692 - 93), Mather warned Salem judge not to admit "evidence" as the reason for litigation and insisted on praying and fasting to heal suffering, but he also I wrote the official defense of New England. . His recent reputation heavily depends on court procedures: Miracle (1693) intangible world
Invisible magic of the world. Naturally, the devil, history and operation (1693) the number of observations about Cotton · Mother 2 church (congregation), Boston theology