Dimmesdale's Puritan Moral Values

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Even the most admired Puritans of society have false and hypocritical values. The ministers of society are also sinners. Dimmesdale, who committed the same sin, did not get alienated and punished. The minister instead keeps his sin a secret from society. No one knew of his sin, and everyone admired him for being the most respected minister of the community. However, when Dimmesdale reveals his scarlet letter, he is then referred to by “his bright wings over the people" and "shed[ing] down a shower of golden truths upon them." (170). Hawthorne's comparison of Dimmesdale to an angel conveys the hypocrisy of puritan moral values, revealing how their strict punishments against Hester differ towards a high positioned minister. Puritans assumptions