Frankenstein, Death, and Original Sin
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Episode 11 —
Frankenstein, Death, and Original Sin
This episode explores Frankenstein by Mary Shelley as more than a warning about science—it’s a story about death, the human will, and what happens when traditional theological frameworks collapse.
🧭 Core Idea
In earlier Christian thought—seen clearly in Paradise Lost—the pattern is:
sin → death
But in Frankenstein, that pattern is reversed:
death → becomes the engine that drives human action
The novel presents a world where death is no longer explained within a theological framework, but becomes the central problem shaping everything.
⚔️ Historical and Theological Background
- John Milton writes within a world shaped by:
- Reformation theology
- divine sovereignty
- human fallenness
- John Calvin and later thinkers emphasize:
- the brokenness of the human will
- salvation as something given
- By Shelley’s time:
- these ideas are still present
- but increasingly questioned and rejected
- William Godwin (Shelley’s father):
- raised in a Calvinist environment
- rejects it in favor of reason and human perfectibility
- Mary Wollstonecraft (her mother):
- rejects the idea that humans are born ruined
- retains belief in moral progress
💀 Death as the Engine
In Frankenstein:
- The death of Victor’s mother becomes the turning point
- Death is no longer a consequence—it becomes the driving force
- Fear of death leads to:
- control
- technological intervention
- desecration of the human body
The grave becomes a resource. The body becomes material.
🧠 The Will: Control vs. Trust
Victor’s response to death reveals a deeper tension:
- The will is active, but shaped by fear
- Faced with death, there are two paths:
- Resurrection (received)
- death is not final
- not ours to overcome
- Control (attempted)
- death must be defeated directly
- leads to manipulation and violation
Victor chooses control.
🧩 The Creature and Belonging
The Creature reads Paradise Lost and asks:
Am I Adam… or a fallen angel?
- He begins with longing and moral awareness
- He seeks relationship and acceptance
- He is consistently rejected
His turning point comes when:
he concludes he will never be received
This leads to:
- collapse of hope
- emergence of rage
⚡ Key Question
The novel leaves a central question unresolved:
Are we corrupt because of how we are made… or do we become destructive because death is already at work?
🔥 The Horror
The real fear in Frankenstein is not the Creature itself—
it is the recognition that his transformation makes sense
Under the same conditions:
- isolation
- rejection
- fear of death
we would become him
✝️ Final Reflection
The episode closes with a contrast:
- If death is ultimate → fear drives everything
- If resurrection is real → death is not the final authority
The question is not whether we face death— but how we face it.
🎯 Key Takeaway
We don’t escape becoming the Creature by overcoming death— but by trusting that death has already been overcome.