Wednesday, September 4, 2019
The Reality of Ethan Brands Unpardonable Sin :: Ethan Brand Essays
The Reality of Ethan Brand's Unpardonable Sin      The relentless obsession of one man becomes the theme of Nathaniel Hawthorne's   haunting tale, "Ethan Brand." A lime-burner by trade in the hills of Western   Massachusetts, Brand passes the lonely hours of the night staring into the   intense flames of the kiln, contemplating the theological doctrine of the   unpardonable sin. What sin could be so totally evil that even the great God of   Heaven could not forgive?     I remember as a child, listening to my father, as he   stood in the pulpit and expounded to his congregation the very same subject that   had so totally mesmerized Hawthorne's character, Ethan Brand. I remember the   many questions I had about this horrible sin. What was it? Could I commit the   unpardonable sin? Maybe I already had. That was the most disturbing of all. It   seems that literary critic R. P. Blackmur has experienced something of the same   when he writes: I do not know how it may be now, but when I was a boy the   unpardonable sin, the unforgivable sin, or--as I was taught in church, the sin   of blasphemy against the Holy Ghost--was a major though intermittent attraction   in the short times that seem so long just before sleep. It was a frightening   possibility that I might find what it was and how to do it: the frightening   thing was that I might then have to do it, as if discovery was actual commission   of the sin. The verse in St. Mark (3:19) contained as much potential horror as   anything I have ever read...so when I read "Ethan Brand" I knew where he   was....(179). Since that time, I have taken my place in the pulpit of a church   like my father before me. And on occasion, I too address the subject and receive   the same questions that I, and others like me, pondered so long ago: the very   same question that haunts, possesses, and ultimately ruins Ethan Brand. Driven   by his insatiable desire to uncover the deep truth of this frightening   possibility, Ethan Brand left his lonely lime kiln on a quest, a quest that   would send him the world over in search of the unpardonable sin. For eighteen   years he studied and researched the idea that slowly took him over. When his   search began, Brand was a kind and gentle man concerned for the well-being of   others. The narrator describes him as .  					    
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