Religion In The Canterbury Tales By Geoffrey Chaucer

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Has religion changed over time or has it always been the same? Religion has been around since the beginning of time and although the heads of it usually preach that being virtuous is important, do they really believe it themselves? In this one show called The Last Kingdom, religion plays a huge part in how the characters feel about each other. The christians feel that the danes are mindless people who just want violence even though they do the exact same thing. This is the hypocrisy of some religious leaders. Even though it was just a show it was based on real events and can show how certain religious groups feel they are more virtuous than others even though they aren’t. Geoffrey Chaucer, a poet in the middle ages, satirized religion and everything …show more content…

In Chaucer’s poem The Canterbury Tales, religion is satirized by looking at how corrupt and immoral the leaders are.

Religious figures are money hungry. In the tales, money is a major part in the corruption of the church. In the Friar's tale, the summoner is extremely corrupt. He pretty much has people spy on the townsfolk so he can get their dirty laundry, and then he makes them pay for their sins so they can be “cleansed” of of their wrongdoing. “This false thief, then, this summoner (said the friar)Had always panders ready to his hand, For any hawk to lure in all England, Who told him all the scandal that they knew; For their acquaintances were nothing new. They were all his informers privily; And he took to himself great gain thereby; His master knew not how his profits ran. Without an order, and an ignorant man, Yet would he summon, on pain of Christ's curse, Those …show more content…

In the summoner's tale, a friar who uses preachings to get things for himself comes across this sick, old, but rich man. He preaches and prays for him and then when the old man understands what he is doing, he asks him to reach down in his butt pocket for money. “And when the sick man felt the friar here Groping about his hole and all his rear, Into his hand he let the friar a fart. There is no stallion drawing loaded cart That might have let a fart of such a sound. The friar leaped up as with wild lion's bound:"Ah, treacherous churl," he cried, "by God's own bones, I'll see that he who scorns me thus atones; You'll suffer for this fart- I'll find a way!" The servants, who had heard all this affray, Came leaping in and chased the friar out; And forth he scowling went, with angry shout”(Chaucer, summoner). This shows how religious leaders don’t care who they swindle because they are selfish. Even today, a church deacon named James Looby stole fifty-three thousand dollars that was allocated to the poor. “Prosecutors say a former deacon and pastoral associate at a northern New Jersey church stole $53,000 from an account designated for needy parishioners. James Looby, 51, served at St. Therese Lisieux Church in Cresskill before resigning in May 2010 and moving to Del Valle, Texas. Two months later, a routine audit by the Archdiocese of Newark uncovered the missing funds.” Ths not only proves that religious leaders are money hungry, but

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