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Survey of World Religions

Survey of World Religions

Sharpen your theological reasoning as you interact with individuals from a variety of religious traditions and wrestle with the deep questions of faith.  Grow in your understanding of other religions and visit their places of worship, listening to their teachings and asking thoughful questions. 

  • Program Highlights

    This ACTS Worldview Program includes:
     

    • Boston - with select Freedom Trail sites that may include
      • USS Constitution
      • Bunker Hill Monument
      • Copps Burying Ground
      • Old North Church
      • Paul Revere House
      • Faneuil Hall and Quincy Market
      • Old South Meeting House
      • Old State House
      • Boston Common
    • Places of worship (may include):
      • Unitarian church
      • Morman temple
      • Jewish synagogue
      • Christian Science
      • Islamic mosque
      • Buddhist temple
      • Post-visit debrief and group discussions
    • Plymouth
      • Plymouth walking tour - Plymouth Rock, waterfront, Mayflower II replica
      • Plimoth Patuxet Museum
      • Forefather's Monument

     

  • Climate

    The weather in Boston, like much of New England, changes rapidly. It is not uncommon for the city to experience temperature swings of 30°F or more over the course of several days. The summers are usually warm and humid, while the winters are cold and windy. It has been known to snow in October and get quite warm in February. The hottest month is August, with an average high of 80°F and the coldest month is January with an average high of 35°. The city averages 42 inches of rain and also 42 inches of snow a year.

  • Geography

    A "City on a Hill," actually three hills, was one of Boston's early names - taken from the Bible and applied by the early Puritans.  The early city of Boston looked almost more like an island.  Now much of Boston's Back Bay and South End are built on reclaimed land.  Two and a half of Boston's three original hills were used as a source of material for the landfill. Only Beacon Hill, the smallest of the three original hills, remains partially intact.
     

    The Charles River separates Boston from Cambridge and Charlestown. To the east lies Boston Harbor and the Atlantic Ocean.

  • Essentials

    • To converse with representatives of other faiths and learn what they believe.
    • Develop skills in being able to defend one's faith.
    • Touring Boston's Freedom Trail.  This 2.5 mile trail from Beacon Hill to Bunker Hill is a red painted or red brick line that takes a person through Boston and along its very historic sites.  The Old North Church, Paul Revere's House, The USS Constitution, and the site of the Boston Massacre are favorites.
    • Seeing the Old North Church and hearing the story of Paul Revere.
    • Looking down at Plymouth Rock and hearing its story then looking up at the soaring 150 foot tall National Monument to the Forefathers - the tallest granite monument in the world honoring the faith and ideals of the Pigrims.
  • Get Prepared

    WATCH
    • Monumental: In Search of America's National Treasure, 2012, Kirk Cameron
     
    READ
    Understanding the Faith by Summit Ministries
    Beyond Biblical Integration by Roger Erdvig
    The Midnight Ride of Paul Revere, Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, 1860 - a classic American poem.
    Of Plymouth Plantation: 1620-1647 by William Bradford
     
    LISTEN
    • The Dr. Jeff Show Podcast 
       
    • Dropping "R"s after "A"s, like the infamous "Pawhk the Cawh." (park the car)The "R"s also can get lost after other vowels as well, especially "ee" sounds, as in "He stee-id the cawh into the ditch." (he steered the car into the ditch)These missing "R"s do get used eventually, usually by adding them to places like onto the end of "uh" sounds. A good example of this would be, "I was driving in my cawh when I got a wicked idea-r.Also, one-syllable words with long "I" sounds, such as "fine," often turn into two-syllable words like, "I feel f-eye-in today so I think I'll go to the pawhk!"
  • Senses

    EAT
    • Boston has wonderful seafood - try some clam chowder or a Lobster Roll. Or if seafood is not your thing, try the Yankee Pot Roast. Don't forget some Boston creme pie.
    DRINK
    Tea! - in Boston. And, of course, water.  Keep hydrated!
  • In A Word:

    Faith.

  • Surprises

    • The difficulty and spiritual challenge of reasoning with those who hold to different faith traditions.
       
    • The tea that was thrown over by the mob at the Boston tea party, could have made over 24 million cups of tea and was worth $1.7 million in today's standards.
    • In the Boston Massacre, 5 Bostonians were killed by British soldiers.
    • The first winter of Plymouth Colony was rough and many of the colonists died of disease and conditions.  The Mayflower sailed with 102 emigrants and of the 102, only 57 survived. Close to fifty percent of the original colonists died the first year.
  • Cities/Destinations Included

    Boston
    Charlestown
    Plymouth

© 2025 by American Christian Tours. 

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