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Religion In The Canterbury Tales

Decent Essays

What an absurd image it could be if the priests purify sinners' soul with golden coins rather than faith? How ridiculous it could be if monks give up helping the poor but pursue the life with luxurious clothes and endless lust? In Geoffrey Chaucer's frame tale The Canterbury Tale, translated by Nevil Coghill, the dark inside the facade of the church has been seen through. By illustrating vivid characters from all classes of the church, The Canterbury Tale constructs the decayed climate in the Medieval period . It discloses the corruption of the church, reflect the greed and hypocrisy of the clergies. First of all, through the illustration of various characters, the attachment to mortal life from individual reveal. With the identities of clergies and God's …show more content…

As the followers of God who are supposed to live in destitution, pilgrims in the tale not only pursue personal satisfaction, but also manipulate their authority and title for their own benefit. They not only betray God's grace, but also show profane blasphemies. They disguise as faithful believers, offer sales of confession to the rich, while ignoring all the poor. The friar, or example, indicates as a great object of criticism. He is "glib with gallant phrase and well-turned speech" and a "festive fellow"(l. 213). Who knows how to ingratiate others to win his own benefit. With the position as someone who "[is] qualified to hear confession", he gets "a special license from the Pope"(l. 224). By injecting money into confession, he negates the value of religion. "[W]henever gifts are given [to him]", he pays back with God's pardon(l. 226-227). And if the penitent "give[s] enough he knew in verity," he would "repented in sincerity" by the friar(l. 233). He subverts the confession of guilt and God's forgiveness, which is considered as a grave sin. He is a hypocritical religious man only with title, a person who corrupts his own church for private

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