Type a new keyword(s) and press Enter to search

Religious Corruption in the Scarlett Letter

 

            
            
            
            
            
             The Scarlet Letter, by Nathaniel Hawthorne, is a historical novel that takes place in Boston, Massachusetts. In the story, the town emphasizes religion over everything else, and its citizens treat the Bible as not only a guide for life but as the rulebook for law. The strict religious beliefs of the characters cause them to shun and condemn a young woman by the name of Hester Prynne for committing adultery. They force Hester to wear a scarlet letter A on her chest as a constant reminder of her wrongdoing, and she soon becomes the model for sin throughout the town. The town's wrongful judgment of her is all based upon religion and the ideas of an evil god. Many today have the idea that religion promotes kindness and acceptance, when in reality it often causes a person to become corrupt and hypocritical. This is first demonstrated in the book by Arthur Dimmesdale, a preacher who is considered holy, despite being a hypocrite and a sinner. The corruption of Religion is seen a second time in the townsfolk of Boston, who condemn Hester for her sins instead of forgiving her for her mistakes. Religion too, causes Governor Bellingham and Reverend Wilson to become corrupt, as they use it to try and take Hesters child away from her. .
             Throughout the novel, Arthur Dimmesdale becomes subject to the corruption of religion, and it causes him to live a life of hypocrisy and sin. Dimmesdale is a preacher in the town of Boston that everyone looks up to as a model of how to live life. He delivers passionate sermons about the wrongs of sin to the people of the town and he tells others how to live their lives based off of the Bible and Gods word. He has devoted his entire life to God and the Bible, and he judges others because of their sin and wrongdoing. This is all highly ironic because despite his efforts to preach against sin he himself is a living image of it. Dimmesdale is in fact the father of Hesters child, and because of it, a sinner.


Essays Related to Religious Corruption in the Scarlett Letter