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corruption in the church

 

The Church and the corruption within affected the people in various ways, as we witness throughout the book. We come across the character of Pentecost Silversleeves. Although he is a lawyer, his morals are anything but moral. He is a clerk in the Church and earns a decent living. Rutherford develops his character, having him take part in the murder of an apprentice. Yet, while his accomplices are punished for the crime he is pardoned. The reason being that he is a man in holy orders and his family had produced two priests and several others who swore he was nowhere near the scene. This reveals the irony within the church as an institution. While priests are known to be honest to God and to themselves, they actually lie and do not abide by their vows at all.
             The Monarchy in England was aware of many of the practices within the Church, yet not much was done about it. King Henry II hated criminous clerks and therefore had many arguments against the Church. He swore to pursue Silversleeves" death until his men, sent to arrest Thomas Becket, the chancellor turned churchman, killed him instead. Upon uncovering his clothing, it was surprising to find the rough hair shirt of the penitent crawling with lice, thus revealing that he was indeed true to the Church. As a result King Henry was so ashamed by his actions that he no longer uttered a word about Church practices, and so Silversleeves was free, and corrupt practices continued.
             The death of Sir Thomas Becket is also the reason behind the pilgrimage to Canterbury in The Canterbury Tales. Although the point of the pilgrimage is to honor Becket , the motives of individual pilgrims range from religious to irreligious. The primarily religious motivations might include seeking cures or favors or giving thanks for cures or favors received, assuaging a sense of guilt or completing a penance imposed by one's confessor. .
             In London the Church even owned the whorehouses, yet it didn't provide the women with adequate living conditions.


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