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Religion In Young Goodman Brown

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In the short story written by Nathaniel Hawthorne, Young Goodman Brown feels conflicted about leaving his new wife, Faith, for a journey for sinful reasons into the nearby forest. With a call to devious actions and a hypocritical train of thought, Goodman Brown seals his fate after his night long journey. This journey includes a treacherous road of trials. In the end, Goodman Brown has a moment of epiphany and then returns to his town a changed man. Nathaniel Hawthorne’s short story, “Young Goodman Brown,” reveals that a loss of religious beliefs and moral code can lead to devastation not only within oneself, but within one's relationships with the individuals around him or her.
Goodman Brown’s morals revolve more around the phrase “do as I say, not as I do.” This mantra is especially true when Goodman Brown is dealing with his wife, Faith. On many occasions Goodman Brown tells Faith to stay away from evil even though he is partaking in these so-called evil events. Young Goodman Brown tells Faith to pray and go to bed so she will not worry about the devilish events he will be taking part in that evening. The majority …show more content…

He stops worshipping with his religious guides as they are sinners in his eyes. The abrupt stop of religious practice causes Goodman Brown to appear as the true sinner in the eyes of everyone in the town. Goodman Brown lives his life in a state of solitude brought on by his own judgement of others. When his family knelt to pray, Goodman Brown refused to take part and “gazed sternly at his wife, and turned away.” (paragraph 72) Goodman Brown causes himself to appear as the corrupt and evil sinner because he went against his moral and religious guides. The hypocritical nature of judging others for the same thing he did has done makes Goodman Brown lose touch with the individuals that he shared a mutual bond

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