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Analysis Of In God I Trust In The Crucible By Arthur Miller

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In God I Trust
“The man is part of his society, and his society is an essential part of who he is. It is impossible to detangle them” (Martine 52). The community and the self is one in the small village of Salem, the mores are binding and indisputable. Any slight deviation causes disorder and corrupts the idyllic theocracy. In the 1953 play, The Crucible by Arthur Miller, this corruption allows a few mischievous young girls to incite a pretentious witch-hunt and mania in Salem. Hale, an accomplished scholar learns how to unsnare himself from the confines of the crooked, yet strict moral code of the townspeople. Miller traces Reverend Hale’s sense of morality based in his interpretation of Christian values as he increasingly gains an understanding of his responsibility to God to illustrate that when people are accepted into a world that values conformity to communal values, they often blindly follow the expectations set forth by those in power. In the short term, those people view their actions as constructive; however, they soon discover that their deference to those in power leads to pretense and wrongdoing. Ultimately, they find themselves having a moral objection to the community's actions and see no alternative but to completely detach from the worldly authority and fight to please God though their interpretation of the truth.
Miller depicts Hale’s automatic acceptance of Salem’s Theocracy as his absolute view of morality to illustrate that when society embraces and

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