To reveal religious hypocrisy in some of Emily Dickinson 's conservative Sabbath went to church society to consider the loyal people. A man at the corner of the street cried everyone to repent their sins before the apocalypse. It was a fanatic man who brought the bomb to him and entered the crowded market. It was the monks who refused to the monastery, giving up all his worldly possessions. These may be extreme examples of followers, but they have one thing in common; they express their devotion in their own way.
Emily Dickinson was a writer of the 19th century, whose Christian faith played an important role. Her religion and juxtaposition of nature are often popular in her writing. For example, I believe that her poem "Some Sabbaths Goes to Church" will replace the death of Calvinism and that everyone can get redemption. Dickinson rejected the teachings of her family church, but she was a spiritual poet who often reflects sacredness.
The first section of Dickinson's poeties tells us how different people maintain their religious views. She said, "I keep the church on the sabbath / I keep it and I am at home" ("Some people keep the church on the sabbath" 1-2). While she was on the Sabbath, they said that they mainly dedicate faith. Then she stayed at home and continued to say that by worshiping God at home she could maintain her faith and relationship with God more realistically and vividly. In the next section, she explains how some people wear robes to prove their righteousness with God and faith, and Dickinson need not prove her beliefs with others. Rather than trying to prove to others that she loves God. This section will help others explain that they must convince them that they are faithful to God.