The Crucible Theme of Religion

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Religion is woven into the everyday life of Salem in The Crucible. The townsfolk practice a form of Christianity centered on a set of clearly defined rules: you go to church every Sunday, you don’t work on the Sabbath, you believe the Gospel, you respect the minister’s word like it is God’s, and so on.

For people accused of witchcraft, any deviation from these rules in the past can be used as evidence for much greater sins in the present. But ultimately, even good and respected and highly religious women like Rebecca Nurse are accused and put to death, so past respectability and religiosity doesn’t necessarily protect anyone.

Questions About Religion

  1. How would you characterize the play’s attitude toward organized religion? Does Miller see all forms of religion as corrupt, or only the particular form embodied by men like Rev. Parris?
  2. How do the religious beliefs of certain characters help them survive or at least cope with difficult situations?

Chew on This

Try on an opinion or two, start a debate, or play the devil’s advocate.

Rebecca Nurse is the character in the play who best embodies a positive form of religiosity.