Biblical References In The Handmaids Tale

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Lizeth Garcia Distorted Religion Laws As you read through The Handmaid’s Tale by Margaret Atwood, you immediately pick up on the abundant amounts of biblical references she has placed purposefully throughout the entire book. The first is the most obvious and easiest to spot. In the epigraph on page one of the novel, Atwood placed “and when Rachel saw that she bare Jacob no children, Rachel envied her sister; and said unto Jacob, Give me children, or else I die. 2 And Jacob 's anger was kindled against Rachel: and he said, am I in God 's stead, who hath withheld from thee the fruit of the womb? 3 And she said, Behold my maid Bilhah, go in unto her; and she shall bear upon my knees, that I may …show more content…

The society which is truly only run by men takes specific sections of the Bible to put up on a pedestal and leave the rest of them to hide and act as if they do not exist. The government takes the parts of the Bible which glorify marriage, that forgive men of adultery for the purposes of childbirth, and that convict women. These were carefully chosen by the leaders and made them into the law that is used in Gilead with the purpose of giving them the most power possible. Other parts of the bible that emphasize meekness and humility have been used to order the Handmaids around. The only authorized religion that is allowed in Gilead is the one that benefits the state leaders. In the Republic of Gilead what the government has chosen to be taken from the Bible has become absolute law. “God is a National Resource” (Attwood 213). The people of Gilead are constantly being reminded by banners that they are ruled over by religion and they simply assume that they are being given the best. When in reality the government picks and chooses what he rules get to be. The government uses the Bible to strip away all rights from women f …show more content…

In the novel the Handmaids tale the reader can see the numerous amounts of manipulations of the Bible which Attwood wrote in. Gilead 's laws and rules come from the Bible, the leaders, who are all men choose only parts of the Bible which benefit them, leaving the women out in the cold. The Bible is wrongly applied quite a lot of times in the novel and that strikes the question does our very own society manipulate any type of law above us citizens. It may not be to the extreme degree as in The Handmaids Tale; however our society does use to bible wrongly to take away certain

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