The Crucible Essay The Crucible) was written in 1953 by Arthur Miller. Miller compared his play the Crucible) to Senator Joseph McCarthy. McCarthy wanted to get rid of Communists sympathizers in the United States. In The Crucible the characters have to confess to witchcraft and then to identify other people in the town so they could escape the punishment. This demonstrates power in the town of Salem.The characters also show their power by convincing people that they have a problem with, and people can lose stuff so it's more gain for people. Also in The Crucible the citizens of the town have very high morals and very strict on their religion. This leads to the power of good vs evil of a puritan which is one of the themes in the story. In the …show more content…
Being a good person with good morals and values means that in the time period of 1953 that you always go to church, don’t work on the sabbath, know all your commandments. The puritans have to obey the church because they had a Government's Theology.The Puritans also believed that no person or group of people should be trusted to run over the government. They also worked on their ethics of honesty, responsibility, and hard work. Puritans did not accept other people who didn't believe in there religion/beliefs.They also believed that anyone who didn't agree with there religion that it was satan's work. They also valued education which was the bible. If you were a puritan how could read then you read the bible. They believed in predestination because they thought that god would save the choose ones ors the sanctification ones and the rest would be damned to hell, and they also believed in ethnocentric. Ethnocentric is when people are evaluating other people and cultures according to their standards of their own culture. All the Puritans wanted sanctification because it says that if you're a good puritan person that god will choose you as the elected people.Everyone wanted this because if god elected you then you had more power in the town and people saw you as more respected. The people also wanted sanctification because it meant that