The Grinch is believed to hate Christmas because he felt alienated from society due to his nature and strange appearance. He is a green monster whose entire body is covered with bright green fur and comes out of his cave during Christmas to wreak havoc among the residents of Whoville. People always knew that he never wanted to be social during Christmas time. They always told stories of how his shoes where too small to fit, and how his head wasn’t screwed on all the way.…
Elie Wiesel uses his relationship with God throughout the story to show the importance and difficulty of maintaining faith during hardship by the different views and consequences of either losing or keeping his faith.…
To illustrate, Eliezer began to lose faith in God when the prisoners were reciting Kaddish for themselves. “For the first time I felt anger rising within me. Why should I sanctify his name? The Almighty, the eternal and terrible master of the Universe chose to be silent. What was there to thank him for?”3 This was vital to the story and was showing how Eliezer was beginning to lose faith in his God which was allowing for him to lose more faith. Furthermore, Eliezer was losing faith in God because others were losing faith in god. In particular, Eliezer was losing faith when the Rabbi lost his faith. “I knew a rabbi from a small town in Poland… One day, He said to me It’s over god is no longer with us.”4 This is essential to the story because it shows that even the most holy people who spent their life preaching about a supernatural power even lost faith. As a result, Eliezer lost faith in his own god due to others losing faith in him and God not helping when the prisoners needed him the…
Hughes story reveals how he was forced into accepting Christ into his life by his Aunt Reed, his friends, and the church community. The pressure begins to be evident when his Aunt Reed creates a false stigma of what it is to be saved. “My Aunt told me that when you were saved you saw a light, and something happened to you inside! And Jesus came into your life!” (Hughes 369). Aunt Reed paints a picture in Hughes head of what it will feel like to be saved, creating false expectations for him. Creating it of great importance not only to…
In Hughes’ nonfiction story, “Salvation,” he writes about his salvation from sin that was instead an abandonment of his belief in Jesus. The story begins with the revival at his Auntie Reed’s church. Hughes was told:…
Langston Hughes efficiently uses rhetorical devices to satirize religion. The story displays religious restoration that the author attended at thirteen years old. By the second sentence, Hughes explains that he wasn't "really saved", which sets a risky tone toward religion. The dishonesty of religion is highlighted throughout the narrative both by displaying the inconsistency between the child's approach of the religious restoration and the adult’s approach. Hughes' choice of language and syntax helps to form his sarcastic and ironic tone toward religion, returning numerous times to examples of the fanfare correlated with church and the excessive reactions of those who attend.…
Throughout the reading, the author explains the process that these young children are put through during a ritualistic ceremony. The process according to the author is the path to righteousness, or the way to God. “My aunt told me that when you were saved you saw a light, and something happened to you inside! And Jesus came into your life! And God was with you from then on! She said you could see and hear and feel Jesus in your soul” (1). The last passage really tells the reader what the ritual entails, or what young Langston and his peers should and will be experiencing during this process to “salvation.”…
[Transition: Before I move on to the three main points, I feel it is essential to give a brief summary of what Multiple Sclerosis is on order to provide an understanding for the reasons of the common symptoms and treatments.]…
In Langston Hughes' Salvation, Hughes illustrates himself as a little boy, who's decisions at a church one morning, reflect the human races instinctive tendency to conform and in a sense, obey. That morning in church, Hughes is indirectly pressured to go up to the altar and "be saved" by seeing the light of god.…
There are many people that have the same exact reactions and feelings that Langston Hughes character had felt when Jesus never appeared and the peer pressure of everyone waiting for him to stand up and say he seen him was forced upon him to lie. Not only did his character stand there and wait with excitement and curiosity, he also held up the service refusing to lie that he had seen Jesus and was saved. When you read that particular part of the story when he was waiting you can tell that he was refusing to be like his friend and lie, he rather had wait to see if Jesus would come and everyone would be right about what should have happened. Since this did not happen the way it was told to him since he was small it causes major doubt not only in his family and his fellow church members but in his religion and his self.…
In the first three sentences of the essay, the speaker adopts a very childlike style. He makes use of simple words and keeps the sentences short, similar in style to that of an early aged teenager. But since the text is written in the past tense and the narrator mentions that he was "going on thirteen" (181), we know the speaker is now older. After reading a little further, we find that the style becomes more complex, with a more select choice of words and longer sentences. The contrast between simple and complex styles is present all through the rest of the essay, and creates a more personal atmosphere. Another particularity of "Salvation" is the fact that the story recounts Langston Hughes' own personal experiences as a young boy. This high degree of intimacy allows Hughes to supply the reader with some very concrete details and vivid descriptions. The beauty in Hughes' personal insights lies in their power to reach our senses. We can clearly picture the images of "old women with jet-black faces and braided hair" (182) and "old men with work-gnarled hands" (182) praying at the church, or hear the sound of "mighty wail of moans and voices" (182). And it is almost impossible not to feel the warmth contained in the "hot, crowded church" (181). In short, the technique used by Hughes is set to put the reader in the same ambiance the young boy is in, thus giving us a closer look at his innocence.…
At a glance, the piece seems to be about a naïve, young boy who believes that Jesus would physically appear in front of him. In a deeper sense, however, it dives into a questioning of faith. The story could be translated to a very common scenario among people having trouble with identifying their religious inclinations. Sometimes, there is a world of pressure put on people by their peers to choose a religion. These people often look for signs or aid from a higher power to help guide them. After receiving no signs or guidance, they renounce faith in God and Jesus and blame the higher being. In Langston’s case: his aunt, the priest, and the congregation put tremendous amounts of pressure on him to become a member of the church. He looked for Jesus and when he never came, Langston renounced his faith by saying, “…and now I didn’t believe there was a Jesus any…
I believe that I am a strong candidate for the Social Justice Fellowship Program because I embody a commitment to social justice and I have been able to excel academically; earning a 3.745 cumulative G.P.A., full scholarship for my senior year, dean’s lists, honors and awards recognition, and being an active change maker through leadership and service. In 2013, I earned the President’s Bronze Standard award given to me by Honorable Mwai Kibaki, the third president of Kenya, for being a young person equipped with positive life skills and a change maker in my community, country, and globally. Despite having faced challenges in my life, including the socio-economic challenges of growing up in the slums of Kariobangi South in Nairobi, Kenya; where I saw my neighbors experience a cycle of poverty and helplessly watched as friends, close relatives, and other young girls dropped out of school due to teenage pregnancy and young men becoming criminals, I have excelled academically and achieved some of my goals. The most challenging experience due to my socio-economic status was during my sophomore college year when I learned that my cousin, who was a brother to me, had been a victim of a deadly armed robbery. This experience opened my eyes to the sacrifices I was making by pursuing a higher…
Langston did not want to upset his aunt and was saved. The conflict of the story was about Langston's decision on becoming saved. Langston did not want to embarrass his aunt and himself excluding his true feelings about the situation-he becomes saved. "So I decided that maybe to save further trouble, I'd better lie, too, and say, that Jesus had come, and get up and be saved. So I got up…
God could show up in the world and tell us all that he exists and tell us to live right, and after departing, parts of the world would be convinced--and try to convince others--that it was an episode of mass hysteria. Others would live their lives in peace and love until eventually they didn't, because it was too difficult. Some would remain dedicated the rest of their lives, but not many. Scientists would prove the "science" behind the event. Some people would forget. Newborns wouldn't believe it as they came to grow. Those of opposing religions would break down into chaos, and to compensate for their crumbling religion, initiate countless holy wars.…