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Puritans: A Literary Analysis

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I grew up going to church, singing hymns and saying prayers. As I grew older I began to question what I was learning in church because I could not bring myself to view God as acting and being something that contradicted what I was learning from science. The Puritans, however, view God and religion as the center of their lives. The Puritans are extremely religious and have strong beliefs about God. Their beliefs trap them within both an exhausting and uplifting falsehood; their views, however twisted, shape their communities and their individual lives. In works such as William Bradford’s writing from Of Plymouth Plantation, Edward Taylor’s poetry, John Winthrop’s “A Model of Christian Charity” and Nathaniel Hawthorne’s The Scarlet Letter, the …show more content…

In Edward Taylor’s poem, “Housewifery,” he says, “Make me, O Lord, Thy spinning wheel complete”(Taylor 1). In saying this, he is envisions God to be in the position of running the spinning wheel, a task considered women’s work at the time. Taylor correlates God with the same work as women are expected to do by Puritans, housework. In John Winthrop’s “A Model of Christian Charity,” he compares motherly love to the love between people of God and their deity when he writes, “So a mother loves her child, because she thoroughly conceives a resemblance of herself in it. Thus it is between the members of Christ; each discerns, by the work of the Spirit, his own Image and resemblance in another, and therefore cannot but love him as he loves himself” (Winthrop 2). This love from God is a motherly, affectionate kind of love. Edward Taylor, a minister, put God in a similar position to a woman, and Winthrop compared the love and bond of God’s people to the love between a mother and child. These comparisons demonstrate how they view God as a motherly figure. The Puritans think of God as a protective figure who keeps them from dangerous situations. God only will protect those who He deems to be

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