The Hammer of God is a short story by G. K. Chesterton about two brothers, Wilfred and Norman. While Wilfred is an exceptionally devout priest, Norman is a retired colonel who finds his delight in wine and women. Wilfred’s attempts to inject some fear of God or the divine morality into his brother’s soul are only met with ridicule from the latter. Finally the priest kills his brother. Worse, he tries to put the guilt on Joe, the village idiot. The theme of Chesterton’s story is the potential devilishness of self-righteous morality. The self-righteously religious people see themselves as superior to the normal people who have certain weaknesses like lust and gluttony. The self-righteous people prefer to pray alone in some corner or niche of the church or the Satsang, away from the sinners. They may even ascend some mountain in search of their superior aloofness. Standing at a height, actual or metaphorical, they begin to see the normal people as too small. One can onl
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