How Did William Penn Contribute To Greek Beliefs

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William Penn, who is the son of Admiral Penn of the English navy and Lady Margaret, is shown to be a hard working individual fighting for his Quaker beliefs. Although Penn was born a Puritan who believed in individual importance to free the world of its impurities, he later converted and had a strong passion for the Quaker ideology of equality with the guidance of Thomas Loe. With these ideals in mind, Penn was determined to lead the Quakers towards religious tolerance in the holy land of Pennsylvania.
William Penn grew up in a very harsh manner where living conditions were not ideal, which inevitably led to his beliefs in the Quaker ideology. While Admiral Penn was away on duty, his “son survived smallpox as well as England’s last outbreak …show more content…

Penn had believed in a declaration made by George Fox that “’Negroes and Indians are as much children of God as are their masters.’” (128). Penn believed that all people, no matter their heritage, are equal in the eyes of the Lord. Although humans may be discriminating against each other in their present lives, they will all inevitably receive the same divine punishment in the afterlife. In addition, Penn believed that the souls are all humans are all the same, that it is the corrupted mind that is tainting our thoughts and emotions against one another. Penn also accepting the Native Americans that were present in the New World when they arrived. Although they were of a completely different structured society, they still have emotions and beliefs like any other human being, thus being children of God themselves although they may not necessarily believe in him. Furthermore, during Penn’s adolescence, Penn’s father had “treated his two bondsmen no differently than his other, white servants” (128). Even as a child, Penn was raised in the views of social equality. Everyone was treated the same no matter the race or position they were undertaking, which may have strengthened and aided in Penn’s conversion of Quakerism with the ideals of equality in mind. With this experience as a child, Penn is able to convert that idea from one household into a whole colony. He prevents the acts of slavery within Pennsylvania as it is unhuman and is the total opposite of the equality that the Quakers strive

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