Saturday, April 18, 2020
Young Goodman Brown And Faith Essays - Young Goodman Brown
  Young Goodman Brown And Faith    Perceptions of Faith in ?Young Goodman Brown? Throughout ones journey in  life, our individual perceptions of faith in God, in mankind, and in ourselves,  guide us along our path. In the absence of clarity of our faith, one is led to  believe the norm is what proves to be popular within a society. Nathaniel  Hawthorne's, ?Young Goodman Brown?, demonstrates to the reader, man's  inherent attraction to evil, the intertwined depths of evil, and that a lack of  understanding of faith; can not only destroy ones life, but also steal from the  beliefs which binds us together in commonality. Even with a clear understanding  of the Puritan attitude, the reader is left with the dilemma that seems to  impose the idea, that faith in God alone is but a dogma in the absence of faith  in and an understanding of humanity. Therefore, we resolve that it is not good  enough to choose between good and evil; we must be all embracing of the doctrine  of faith and forgiveness, so that we can function in a contributory way within  our community. Is Young Goodman Brown's encountering with the Devil merely a  test of his own faith? Or perhaps, is he simply intrigued by the mystique of  evil forces that lie outside the realm of what he considers acceptable behavior  in his Puritan times? ?With this excellent resolve for the future, Goodman  Brown felt himself justified in making more haste on his present evil purpose?  (634). Through his writing Nathaniel Hawthorne is able to develop a distinct set  of doctrine that existed within the mind of Goodman Brown. Thus, the reader can  assume that one trait of Puritan Society is a lack of tolerance for forgiveness.  It is no wonder that Puritanism is known for a somber outlook on life, and a  tendency to be immovable. A Puritan Society might find it difficult to see  perfection in it's own members, especially if they do not recognize their own  tendency toward hypocrisy. Young Goodman Brown's perception of his faith  abandons him because he lacks a clear understanding of his experience in the  woods. So in his ignorance he simply continues to criticize others due to the  events that have taken place in his misguided life. He resolves that those he  had previously viewed as pious, are now hypocrites in his eyes. ?Men of  dissolute lives and women of spotted fame, wretches given over to all mean and  filthy vice and suspected of horrid crimes? (640). It is clear that in the  absence of the understanding of the freewill of mankind, Goodman Brown sees only  immoral, sanctimonious, mischief-makers all around him. Thus, throughout the  course of his life, Brown is overwhelmed with the burden of judging those around  him. ?A stern, a sad, a darkly meditative, a distrustful, if not a desperate  man did he become? (642). Unfortunately, even though Goodman Brown's ability  to withstand the allure of evil sustained him through his own perceptions of  faith, he lost something he can never regain; his belief in the goodness of  mankind. When faith is shaken, or lost, whether in religion as an institution,  or in ourselves for not being as constant as we think others are being, we  change somehow. Like losing one's virginity, when the mystery of the church is  questioned, or made more real to us, like it was to Goodman Brown in the forest  that night, we are never the same. With a loss of blind faith comes the  realization of a world filled with the horrors we pray to rectify, only to  realize that we ourselves are as guilty as anyone. Our salvation comes with a  clear understanding of forgiveness and the communion of saints which enables  each of us to pick up the pieces of our unsuccessful attempts at perfection and  forge ahead in acceptance of a less idealistic coexistence.    
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