The preacher, Jonathan Edwards, who, according to the Before You Read section in our
textbook, was considered the most influential American writer before
Benjamin Franklin, preached using the terrors of religion. Although I
feel like I wouldn't have responded well to his intense preaching
techniques, it must have worked for some people because we are still
reading his speeches today. His harsh teachings try to scare his listeners into believing the word of God.
Edwards has many ways to engage his
listeners and get them to feel his same emotion towards religion. For
starters, he builds them up with his words and dramatic feelings. How
can one not get caught up in a speech when the speaker is using such
emotion? He also attempts to make the listener feel bad for their
blessings by comparing them to the less fortunate. "What would not those
poor damned, helpless souls give for one day's such opportunity as you
now enjoy!" (Edwards 99). While I would probably not be this harsh, Edwards gets his message across, and his listeners will believe him. One harsh quote that stood out to me was the following. "You
are ten thousand times so abominable in his eyes, as the most hateful
and venomous serpent is in ours" (Edwards 98). I think the name calling
and tearing down is unnecessary when trying to prove a point,
especially because Edwards does not show much support for his own
opinions. Edwards knows that there is a right and a wrong way with no gray in between when regarding God.
Similar to how Edwards uses anger and intense lessons to
engage his readers, the characters of The Crucible use fear to
find what they are looking for. They threaten, and eventually prove,
that if you have any part in the act of witch craft, you will be hanged.
If one was believed to be a part of the witch craft, they would be
tortured until they admitted to it. How this served a purpose is beyond
me because if you continue hurting someone to get them to admit
something, of course they will admit to it even if it is falsified, like most women did in response to Abagail's accusations. In
the end, people will be hanged if they did or didn't get involved in the
witch craft. This was the case for John Proctor. He admitted to
performing witch craft, but he was really innocent. John Edwards puts it
best when he says, "God is dreadfully provoked, his anger is as great
towards them as to the fierceness of his wrath in hell, and they have
done nothing in the least" (Edwards 97).
Proctor's decision to admit to a
crime that he did not commit was a large symbol in the novel. He
offered himself as a way to end the rumors and conflict in his
community. Judging by Jonathan Edwards' speech, he would most likely not
have agreed with Proctor's actions. "Look at other things, as the good
state of your bodily constitution, your care of your own life, and the
means you use for your own preservation" (Edwards 97-98). However,
Proctor made his decision and added a sympathetic touch to the story.
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