The Puritans left England to get more religious freedoms and to escape persecution.
Answer:
George Whitefield and Jonathan Edwards were preachers during the First Great awakening.
Explanation:
The Great Awakening was a difference in the religious ideas that changed the colonies in America during the 1730 and 1740. This movement came to exist in this period when preachers travelled one town to another town by spreading the words of their God also about salvation and sins.
Jonathan Edwards became one of the popular preachers who delivered the most famous sermons called Sinners in the Hands of an Angry God. He also produced volumes of sermons, journals and observations. Edwards hoped his knowledge would make people move in the right path and remind them of the fate that awaited if they failed to acknowledge their sins. Edwards viewed sin as extremely darker than hell.
George Whitefield was an evangelist who began to preach in an energetic way which helped to spread the Awakening in England and the colonies. The purpose was for Christian people to look at their souls and turn their hearts toward God.
Laura Esquivel is a Mexican writer, famously known for having written: "Como agua para chocolate" (Like water for chocolate).
In one of her texts, she describes how magical and unique were her experiences early as a child when being part of the "ceremony" her mother and grandmother would make in order to prepare the food they were going to eat. In one of those occasions, she was warned by one of the Help not to step on a corn kernel because the God of the Corn was inside it and she had to be respectful to it. Later, she moved away, left the kitchen stories behind, and learned all sorts of things. Among them, she realized the God of Corn belonged to the primitive magical thinking (mythic belief system of the native communities) of humans which has no place in the rational, scientific and modern world. Nevertheless, within the years, she saw herself repeating not only the steps to cook a certain dish but also the stories the women of her family would tell her. That way she integrated her past with the cooking and found herself stopping her own daughter from stepping on a kernel of corn, because, as she was taught, there it was the God of Corn. She learned to give the food the importance it was given many many years ago, especially the corn, which was a symbol of life, fertility and prosperity for the ancient Mexicans.
Answer:
Uhhhhhhh I guess we do owe death a life...
Explanation:
Lol, I really dont understand it but... I'll go with it XD
Have a nice day!♥