John Bunyan's The Pilgrim's Progress, and the Allegorical Conveyance of Forgiveness
- cleocuizon
- Jul 29, 2022
- 12 min read
Updated: Sep 17, 2022
Written By: Cleo C.
29 Jul. 2022

Source: Encyclopædia Britannica, Encyclopædia Britannica, 12 May 2020, https://www.britannica.com/topic/The-Pilgrims-Progress#/media/1/460468/237451. Accessed 26 July 2022.
Table of Contents:
Notable fables, like the Turtle and the Hare, provided meaningful lessons for many generations of readers. Likewise, such tales utilizing friendly creatures impact the meaningful notions of human experiences. But such pleasantries of one's childhood are not the sole emblems of allegorical masterpieces. Classical novels that persevere throughout time prevail with their relevance to human experiences, being a timeless consultant to society's desire for emotional or spiritual inspiration.
One example that epitomizes this mastery originates from a Puritan name John Bunyan. Condemned to prison for his beliefs, the uncertainty of life brought a strong inclination for consolation. And where does one find such tools? Amid this personal adversity, the sole resource available was a pen and paper. Thus, one of the most prestigious works in literary history was born (Lundin ix).
Bunyan's The Pilgrim's Progress describes a man named Christian who places a firm resolve on a pilgrimage to the Celestial City. Perceived by a dream witnessed by the author, Christian preserves in a journey filled with tribulations, enlightenment, and repentance. The story dissects into two parts; one contains Christian's adventure, and the latter is about his wife, Christiana. As both individuals surrender their mortal tendencies for salvation, Bunyan's account performs allegoric teachings on virtuous deeds, one of them including the concept of forgiveness. Centered on seeking repentance as a pilgrimage, it contributes to the morale through lyrical proses with deep meaning. Thus, by centralizing on each character's demonstration of this theme, Bunyan's The Pilgrim's Progress enhances moral teachings of forgiveness through abstract usages of allegory.
Principles of Allegory
Before analyzing Bunyan's allegoric conveyance of forgiveness, understanding the basic principles of allegory is significant in knowing its literary influence. An allegory poses as a "symbolic fictional narrative that conveys a meaning not explicitly set forth in the narrative." (Britannica 2019). Commonly embodied as fables, apologue, or parables, they present this 'double meaning' that indicates profound representations of an idea apart from what is being presented (Britannica 2019). Such instances include using unorthodoxly related characters or events in the narrative to convey a symbolic notion of the author's intended message. A source from Philp Thomas Sitterding demonstrates an accurate example of this strategy, "a knight comes to signify the good man, a maiden virtue, and a dragon vice; when the knight kills the dragon and rescues the maiden, the allegorist says that the only means for the good man to achieve virtue is by conquering his own vices." (5).
In Bunyan's case, The Pilgrim's Progress serves as a novel that is immensely rich in allegoric concepts, making the story a prestigious epitome on the compelling usage of allegorical storytelling. To further elaborate on such methods, Sitterding introduces a central idea: circumstantial and intended meaning. Allegory functions in two processes, where the circumstantial meaning —the concrete idea presented in the story— coincides with the intended meaning — the author's hidden message from that articulated event— to provide that impactful effect in conveying specific themes or lessons (5-6). Similar to a famous fable called The Turtle and The Hare, both aspects transpire to relay the crucial lesson of patience. First, we have the circumstantial meaning describing the race between both animals, then placing an intended meaning as a narrator conveys the virtuous lesson towards the end of the story.
Bunyan demonstrates a similar effect in his novel, where such characters embark on an adventure that epitomizes a spiritual process of forgiveness. Aside from other virtues that may be present, Christian and Christiana's story centralize many instances of repentance; hence the purpose of their pilgrimage is to seek acceptance into the Celestial City. Weighing more on the intended meaning, the novel's allegoric richness encapsulates the thematic essence of forgiveness in one's spiritual voyage. Based on three notable characters, their paths capture the enlightening message and the importance of allegorical features conveying humanity's valuable lesson on inner acceptance.
Christian: The Sinner who Sought Salvation
Through Bunyan's main protagonist, Christian's journey served as a foundational emblem of following pilgrims on their way to the Celestial City. His pilgrimage paved a path to countless adversity, testing his faith and endurance needed for repentance (Bunyan 11-155). Although his unwavering faith is imperfect, these obstacles encapsulate the concept of forgiveness through a reminder of his purpose. Among the many challenges faced — defeating Apollyon, enduring the Shadow of Death, or losing Faithful at the Vanity Fair— one particular event accurately describes features of repentance amid an uncompromising ordeal. This occurred during Christian and Hopeful's imprisonment at the Doubting Castle.
The origin of this outcome began when Christian decided to take a shortcut through the By-Path meadow. Unable to pass through the river's rough waters, both surrendered to the detour's convenience despite Hopeful's suspicion (Bunyan 106). Unaware of a trap awaiting its prey, both pilgrims eventually were dragged from their progress and brought into the territories of Giant Despair. In his lair lies the invulnerable Doubting Castle, where Christian and Hopeful were imprisoned and tortured (Bunyan 107-111). Enduring multiple sessions of physical, emotional, and psychological maltreatment, both pilgrims nearly surrendered to such ordeal until Hopeful mentioned a key needed. Sparked by the thinnest thread of hope, Christian awakens himself from his sorrowful meditation and brings out the key named Promise, which was entrusted to Christian in dire need (112). As they successfully escaped the clutch of Giant Despair and his wife, they left a reminder to any passerby of the ruse that lies near the Doubting Castle (113).
Through this instance, we witness Christian and his companion's greatest ordeal. Driven by guilt for disobeying the righteous path, the Doubting Castle served as punishment for those who perceived their spiritual journey with impetuous intent. Through Giant Despair's tortuous activities, Christian and Hopeful were forcefully driven to a state that pushed them into self-sabotage and resentment. Despite the wavering desire to escape, the protagonist slowly lures himself into Giant Despair's ultimate trap: the betrayal of the self. Thankfully Hopeful's unconditional faith in their escape brought back Christian's consciousness, leading them to remember the Promise key. This aspect of the event manifests the allegorical conveyance of forgiveness, in which the key becomes the sole representation. Driven by psychological surrender, Hopeful's lecture reminded Christian of the key entrusted to him when he needs aid that deems impossible. The simplicity of such relief relays a meaningful notion that forgiveness does not require the surmounting feat to earn. Instead, it lies in the reminder of one's unwavering faith in their beliefs, assured of the service one can receive when requested with genuineness. A source from John R. Knott shares a similar perspective on the key's prominence, "The brilliance of the episode lies in the fact that Bunyan makes escape seemingly so difficult yet paradoxically so easy; Christian has only to remember that Scripture has provided him with his own key, a solution that comes to him as a result of prayer." (Knott 449)
Remembering an advocate of the Celestial City— in the form of an object or character— was the act of forgiveness in itself. As Christian repents for his mistake, the key served as a reminder that despite what hurdles he may endure, his steadfast faith will always provide a reassuring redirection. Christian's circumstances tell the reader how forgiveness transpires in removing oneself from secular tendencies to decipher true spiritual renewal and perceive the authenticity of one's enduring faith (Knot 450). Even through an entrusted emblem, it was enough to remind Christian of the mercy that awaited him and his journey.
Christiana: The Ignorant that Seeks Contrition
Besides the arduous journey transpired through Christian, Christiana presented a more leisurely cruise through the same path her husband has accomplished. The second part of Bunyan's novel centers on Christian's wife, which occurs after news of her husband's victory spreads throughout the land. Apart from the relief she felt for his well-deserved repose, guilt and regret also brewed from her mistrust (Bunyan 169-170). Unable to rest from her sin, she follows her husband's laborious journey not only to reunite with her partner but to seek repentance for her former ignorance (Bunyan 169-299).
Despite her trip being dissimilar to Christian's tortuous environment, Christiana's story does not hold inferior in its conveyance of forgiveness. Rather, her decision to partake in a treacherous road becomes Bunyan's demonstration of the theme. Like Christian's ordeal in the Doubting Castle and many other instances in his journey, the consciousness of one's guilt towards a spiritual purpose drives each protagonist into desperate acts of atonement. Bunyan seems to explain that the request for forgiveness does not require the dire sacrifice of oneself; instead relies on the realization of her sin and the guilt that inclines them to seek repentance. A source from William A. Madden explains a similar notion: forgiveness implies a sense of shame, and that guilt implies a divine law to transgress (139-140). This notion is evidently embodied through Christiana's decision, in which her guilt for doubting her husband and the Higher Being plows a heavy burden in her consciousness, desiring the spiritual contentment her husband has acquired.
Christiana's story may serve as a compassionate approach to the theme, where such femininity could help distinguish its allegoric authenticity against its masculine predecessor. As each protagonist becomes a hero/heroine in their circumstances, their conveyance of the theme conceptualizes diversity in its concept. One theory to consider this coincides with a source by Margaret Soenser Breen, where she conceptualizes an intended position in their progress:
"In the Pilgrim's Progress, Christian's spiritual capacity is so evolved that, relying on his consciousness of the promise of salvation, he only needs the intermittent assistance of single characters…By contrast, Christiana's journey to the Celestial City presupposes that the consciousness of her husband is the shaping force of her progress. "(445).
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