Kevin Besser
Ms. Gawith
English IV
7 December 2015 Westboro Baptist Church Hypocrisy Compared to 17th Century Puritan Ideologies
Throughout time with society people consistently fall into two main categories; people that judge, and people who are judgmental. There is a considerable difference between these two types of people. For instance, if one were too judge it could simply be to make a decision, but to be judgmental one would look at another person and look down on them putting themselves above them. Two prime examples of judgmental people are the people of the Westboro Baptist Church, And Puritanism. The Westboro Baptist Church correlates alongside Puritanism ideologies concerning Calvinistic theories, which ultimately caused them to
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Hester Prynne the protagonist in the book, The Scarlet letter is ridiculed throughout the novel for committing the sin of adultery. This leads to her being an outcast to society and not being able to make a decent living, for at the time all a woman could do was marry and be a housewife. She took up the trade of being a seamstress, for her embroidering could be considered legendary. Onto the novel, it states that with all of this constant criticism gave Hester the power to see another's sins. Which could be a symbol that a lot of people are sinning and judging other people at this time. But how does ostracized Puritanism relate to the modern Christian extremist Westboro Baptist …show more content…
He and his family own the title as Ben Williamson say the most hated family in America. The Westboro Baptist Church owns many famous common slogans from Christianity. Such as, God hate America, God hates fags, Thank God for Dead Soldiers, Thank God for 9/11, Thank God for IEDs, and Pray for More Dead Soldiers. This shows how extreme these people are compared to the common christian. Though this church does not have as large as a backing as the Puritans did a few hundred years ago. They still have a meek population of around 70, which doesn’t seem that much. This is even without taking into consideration that most of the 70 are family members of Fred Phelps himself. Though it doesn’t take a huge population to make a global impact it, for one person could be the center of attention for weeks on the media.The way they gather this attention is to do unique activities such as Protesting pro-homosexual events; picketing at dead soldiers‟ funerals and other funerals of prominent personalities or tragedies; declaring judgment on nations and religions including particularly Protestantism, Catholicism, and Judaism. Unto the beliefs of the Westboro Baptist Church, they have a independent, primitive Baptist Church, and is strongly hyper-Calvinistic. The Church has very similar beliefs to the Puritans, for their church is a part of an elect system. This means only the elect will go to
Facts: Fred Phelps is the leader of the Westboro Baptist Church which is considered to be extremist. Phelps and his followers believe that God punishes those who are tolerant of homosexuality. Since, the United States has a high tolerance of homosexuality, they believe that the United States is damned. The military also has recently become more accepting of homosexuals in their ranks, thus the Westboro Baptist Church pickets many military funerals.
In 2013, the hate group planned to picket the memorial of Sgt. Stefan Smith, a Third Infantry Division soldier killed in Afghanistan a month before. As word spread of Westboro’s plans, community members launched a Facebook group organizing a counter-protest. The group drew nearly two thousand supporters who planned “to create a human barrier/shield
Westboro Baptist Church is a Church full of many people who protest at many military funerals. There are many people like the people in Westboro Baptist Church, those are the type of people who hate America. In the year 2013, Westboro Baptist Church was counter-protested at a military funeral. People who hate America and the people who fought for them, should be removed from this country. Westboro Baptist Church is one of the many people who protest at military funerals, there are many more who hate America even though we send people out to fight for them, if those people think that America is not worth their love, then they should be removed and sent to the nearest country, People should be able to understand, that America is a country that fights for everyone’s freedom, and their rights.
English Protestants created a large group of people in the 16th and 17th centuries called the Puritans. These people advocated strict religious discipline along with a strong beliefs and worshipping. The Scarlet Letter reflected on Puritan Society in several ways, from religion to discipline and punishment. Religion seemed to control everyone, the reverend was the person that everyone looked up to, and the community, as a whole, believed in fate and destiny. Puritan relationships were very restricted, therefore making adultery a terrible sin in the eyes of the community. In the 17th century, Boston was extremely strict and the laws were strongly enforced, making Hester’s sin a great
The Westboro Baptist Church has long been regarded in the media as a group filled with hate and detestation for virtually anyone who does not practice their teachings. In reality, the members of the Westboro Baptist Church hold a strong belief that the messages that are portrayed through their picketing and social media websites are actually acts of love that reveal the severity of the actions that most humans partake in. Most of the members were born into the Church and therefore believe that the words they proclaim are the absolute truth. Although most Americans do not agree with the teachings and practices that the Westboro Baptist Church preaches, it is important to learn about and try to understand the various aspects of the church in
Since its inception the Westboro Baptist Church has expressed an agenda of fanatical Baptism where they promote homophobia, anti-Semitism, and the message that God hates everyone but the WBC.
This page describing her crime shows how Hester defies the Puritan belief system through rebellion because the crime of adultery is a serious sin in their religion, showing that she purposely disobeys the laws of their religion by having an affair. Hester Prynne also defies the Puritan belief system through the scene where she immerges from the jail cell and is seen in public with her wedlock child for the first time. Hawthorne describes the manner in which she immerges from the jail and how the town reacts, in the quote “Those who had before known her, and had expected to behold her dimmed and obscured by a disastrous cloud, were astonished, and even startled, to perceive how her beauty shone out, and made a halo of the misfortune and ignominy in which she had enveloped” (46). This quote shows Hester’s rebellion against the Puritan beliefs because, due to how serious her crime is seen in the Puritan community, the town members had expected her to show sorrow, shame, and weakness as she walked from the jail cell. But, instead she walks out with her head held high, ignoring their judgment, showing no shame and in the crime she committed, and disregarding the mannerisms the Puritan’s expected of her. Along with her rebellion, Hester Prynne defies the Puritan belief system
The Westboro Baptist Church (WBC) is known for their obscene protests where they display signs that discriminate towards homosexuals. Although the members of the WBC considered themselves a part of an actual church, the church mainly consists of the family members of its founder, Fred Phelps (Clay, 2016). The church holds beliefs that are similar to Calvinism, a denomination of Christianity. Similar to the Calvinists, the members of the church believe that they are a part of an elect group of people that God has chosen to be his own (Clay, 2016). Because they are a part of God’s elect, they feel they must speak against the homosexuality that is present in America and in other places of the world. They travel around the world protesting and shouting hurtful phrases that cause people to
In the novel The Scarlet Letter by Nathaniel Hawthorne, Hester Prynne is portrayed as an adulterous woman, having a child out of wedlock. She is forced to display her terrible sin publicly by wearing a letter A the color of scarlet. Though she is seen by the Puritans as sinful, she displays many of the virtues stated in Proverbs 31. Hester Prynne shows moral excellence as well as righteousness and goodness despite being wrought with sin.
Not affiliated with any southern baptist or general baptist churches, the thirty-nine member (The Journal) Westboro Baptist Church is primarily known for its continued protest against the LGBT community, the Catholic Church, and the military (Wikipedia). The westboro Baptist Church’s first public service was held on November 27, 1955(Wikipedia). This was the first time the church publicly condemned the world. Most recently the Westboro Baptist Church have agreed with the shooting at the Pulse Night Club in Orlando, Florida stating that God sent Omar Mateen to kill the gays because “God hates fags.” While other churches preach about loving one another as god has loved them, the westboro
In the life of Hester Prynne, she is viewed as an adulterer. During her sentencing on the scaffold, people enjoyed seeing her be humiliated and punished for her reckless actions. The self-righteous society views her as an outcast: “Thus the young and pure would be taught to look at her, with the scarlet letter flaming on her breast,—at her, the child of honorable parents,—at her, the mother of a babe, that would hereafter be a woman, —at her, who had once been innocent, —as the figure, the body, the reality of sin” (Hawthorne 76). Because she broke the strict Puritan laws,
Through out the course of history, those who were considered sinners were often out casted from the society. This is much the case with Hester Prynne in Nathaniel Hawthorne’s The Scarlet Letter. After a public trial, Hester is considered a sinner due to her birthing of a so called “devil child”. Hester is convicted to the life long bearing of a scarlet letter on her chest. The Scarlet Letter that Hester Prynne wears symbolizes the change in perception of sin through out the novel. Due to the revelations of the governor Winthrop and the reverend Dimmesdale, the way sin is perceived changes from one of shame to the idea that every one is a sinner in their own right.
Hester Prynne, who is best known for her act of adultery and the scarlet letter she wears upon her breast, best represents a mix of Romanticism and Puritanism. Introduced in the beginning of the book, she automatically is outcast from the rest, not only because of her act of adultery and sin, but from her obvious different way of thinking. After Hester’s baby named Pearl is born, she can especially be shown to have more of a Romantic way of thought as she raises
Often in society people are criticized, punished and despised for their individual choices and flaws. In the novel, The Scarlet Letter, by Nathaniel Hawthorne, the author uses Hester Prynne to symbolize that those who challenge social conformities can benefit society as a whole. Though she has been banished for committing adultery, she sees that the community needs her. Through her generous accomplishments the community realizes she is a person who, regardless of her sin, can affect the community in a positive way.
Death is a part of life that nobody will ever escape; it is the last act we will perform before we are physically no more. There are different cultures, religions, beliefs and values that people have the opportunity of being a part of in their life, and nothing reflects that more when someone dies. People have become more open about death, dying and bereavement, where they are now influenced to broaden their horizons about the options they can choose. The theory of modern and postmodern deaths characterizes an individual’s choice on how they choose to die and accept death and explain new ways of thinking about death practices. Through personal experience of death and bereavement modern and postmodern death will be analyzed. It will be discussed through personal links and connections and explain whether and how it validates and or offers a critique of the theory of global risk society.