Kaori wrote:It is indeed a good book. I was slightly put off by Hawthorne's rather negative view towards the Puritans, but it is very beautifully written. Have you ever read "The Minister's Black Veil?" It's a short story by the same author. Very intersting.
[color=Red]I think the Puritans deserved a lot of the reputation Hawthorn gave them. Persecuted in England, they came to America seeking religious freedom, but once they got here, they offered no such freedom to anyone else. In my opinion, they were one of the most oppressive groups in early America. It wasn't until the puritan minister Roger Williams was exiled to the Road Island Colony that the Quakers were formed and religious freedom allowed (if only in that small, Road Island Colony). By the way, Williams was exiled for his beliefs that church ministers should not be colony leaders (Church-State separation) and that the natives should be paid for the land the Puritans took from them.
Aside from that, the Puritans believed in predestination. By that, I mean they detested the arrogant notion that salvation could be personally chosen. They believed God willfully
denied salvation to people just because He could. Only the elect or justified could enter Heaven, and the evidence of that justification was what they called "sanctification", or holy behavior allegedly resulting from justification. They never believed that sanctification could bring about justification, but many who wanted others to regard them as elect would act chronically holier-than-thou and impose strict, harsh, impossible standards on others to show (and possibly make sure) they were justified. As you can imagine, this mode of thinking led to a lot of down-nose looking and harsh law and paradigm. Much of what is read in
The Scarlet Letter, though perhaps exaggerated, is probably not that far from the truth.
I liked The Scarlet Letter. Any problems I had with it were brought about by the issues it raised or minor stylistic preferences. There is no doubt that this book is one of the greats! I think reading the old classics is great, though I find I have little time to read anymore]