The myth of Puritan Puritan rushed to the United States from the late 1500s to the early 1600s to understand their religion. Their overall lifestyle is based on their strict religious beliefs. They have a theocracy based on false complicity. Puritan strictly adheres to the Bible. This is not always the case. The "Puritan" lifestyle they are looking for is really a myth. Merriam - Webster considers the myth as an unfounded or incorrect concept. Many of Arthur Mylar's people explaining in the play call it "crucible".
Such myths have a weak understanding of rich intellectuals and religious heretics of New England ยท Puritanism even by senior students. It masks the important influence of Puritan against early American nationalism, and students view the political origins of the people as being completely different from Puritan culture. For example, from the historical background, students often assume that the constitutional guarantee to separate churches from states is intended to limit the authority of the church after the revolution to protect the democratic sovereignty of the state government . They do not consider this protection as mutual protection and effectively protect the autonomy of colonial Puritan churches from the mandatory authority of state-run British churches led by political sovereignty .
Puritanism is not a formally defined religious division with Protestantism, but Puritan himself was rarely used himself since the 18th century. Like the formal rejection of Roman Catholicism, some of Puritan's ideals were incorporated into the English church; others were absorbed in many Protestant denominations that appeared in the United States and the UK at the end of the 17th and 17th centuries it was done. The Congregational Church, widely regarded as part of the reformist tradition, is the descendant of Puritan. In addition, the faith of Puritan was enshrined in the Savoy Declaration (belief recognized by the congregation's church).