Surely, this is another example of the protestant claim to choose their own version of a Christian God, which defines the revolt against the Roman Catholic Church through the Lutheran ideology. These are important aspects of the characterization of the ”fallen” angel in Satan and the fall of humanity in Adam and Eve. This aspect of “the fall” of Adam and Eve define the symbolic aspects of protestant life, which alienated many Christians from the Roman Catholic Church, Milton deliberately infuses this aspect of ‘free will” into the liberation of Adam and Eve through the “rationality” of Satan’s rebellion against God. Certainly, this is a major point in the religious significance of Paradise Lost as a poetic example of protestant frustration and anger at the corruption of the Roman Catholic Church during the mid-17th …show more content…
This view of the protestant religion is part of the struggle between an individual. Such as Satan, that is unable to find redemption in comparison to Adam and Eve that must continually seek redemption in the eye’s of God: “From granting hee, as I from begging peace:/All hope excluded thus, behold in stead/ Of us out-cast, exil 'd, his new delight,/Mankind created, and for him this World(Milton 4.104-107). In this manner, Satan has become a heroic narrator that expresses the extreme version of anti-Catholic sentiment by Milton, but he is also religiously aware of Adam and Eve’s free will that enables to them judge their own view of