This book tells New England people and extraordinary stories of their spiritual life. They are trying to figure out when and where the general people are on the planet, such as farmers, housewives, craftsmen, businessmen, sailors, ambitious scholars. David Hall explains the world of religious consensus and resistance.
The world of miracles of David D. Hall, Decision Date: Early popular religious relief in New England was a multilayered and subtle depiction of New England mass religion in the 17th century. Through letters, diaries, books, churches, and the records of the town, the hall leads the reader through a fascinating journey of ambiguous universe where competitive propositions are promoted and unified by the essence of spiritual and material existence. In most cases this book deals with what theologians call "theology", and only this book is not about theologians. Rather, Hall talks about how the sustainment of ideal barriers to social order and natural order is actually being carried out, and how God's totipotency to form peace and clergy and theoretical Has been adjusted. Believer's View
"The World of Miracles" and "Judgment Day" are one of the most important works in the history of American religion. The Hall applied the concept of "mass religion" (or life religion) from early modern European religious and social studies to American religious history. Prior to the work of the hall, Perigira's New England heart was the most influential work of American Puritan. Miller introduced the history of thought of Puritan, focusing on theology and philosophy of priests. He believes that Puritanism has cultivated the intellectual heritage that still existed in 1939. The work of the hall departed from the thought history of Puritan. Instead, it looks like a non-professional way inside the hall or in daily life. Hall refused to express as "the clerics are dominating the church so their way of thinking is always superior". He also refused to write the history of Puritan. The word "Puritan" assumes "people in New England have complete or complete faith as an example."