Analysis Of Dangerous Journey By John Bunyan

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Life will get easier is what you keep telling yourself over and over as your sitting in your jail cell. You were so bold to wear a sweatshirt that stated, “I didn’t do it.” Your story is a story that I will never forget to this day because of the way it opened up my eyes to see the real system of our world. Sitting in class hearing a story about a man that I did not know existed, I was left with in awe of the idea that something like that happens. Because of your persistence and strength, your name and story will never be forgotten. Many people go through “dangerous journeys” like the character Christian did, and how he remained hopeful to God’s master plan. Along with Christian, a man who was in jail because of the unlawful government, Boethius, …show more content…

In this children’s book, the protagonist Christian who sets out on pilgrimage journey with a huge burden on his back in which he seeks for the Celestial city. Christian lives in the City of Destruction, where it “was doomed to be burned with fire from heaven, in which fearful overthrow…” (Bunyan, 8) Throughout this long journey, one instance that I would like to share with you is when Christian and Hopeful end up at Doubting Castle amongst where two giants live called Giant Despair, and his wife Diffidence. Christian takes a shortcut route thinking it will lead him to the same road, and ends up leading him to the giants castle. From not feeding them to beating them, Christian lost all confidence by the words “Perhaps the giant is right… Perhaps death would be better than the miserable life we lead.” (Bunyan, 93) Many times you have probably thought about giving up, or just lost all hope, but unfortunately no one was there for you to give you advice beside yourself. Fortunately, Christian had Hopeful along his journey in him reminding him “My brother, he said, Apollyon couldn’t crush you, nor the Valley of the Shadow of Death. And remember how you played the man in Vanity Fair. Don’t forget I’m in the dungeons with you, a far weaker man by nature than you are. This giant has wounded me as well as you, and cut off the bread and water from my mouth. And, like you, I’m deprived of light. So let …show more content…

In the novel Boethius, the consoloation of philosophy, Boethius receives answers from Lady Philosophy about life’s unanswerable questions. One question being “Does evil exist, and who controls it? Lady Philosophy tells Boethius “ … because good and evil are contraries, and if we establish that goodness is powerful, then it must follow that wickedness is weak.” (Boethius, 109) The act of evil is not real, because only the supreme good can exist; both cannot exist at the same time. The power that evil has over us is physically, not the soul. Since God is good, he has the ability to take control of our souls and bodies, where evil can only take control of the body, not the mind unless you allow it. Boethius compares evil people to animals representing their level of worth. Essentially, this lesson is to teach you that evil does not have control over you, and that everything is for the good of God. If you commit yourself you God, your soul and body will be His. Do not think that evil cannot still happen, it can. Matter of a fact, Boethius questions “God gives rewards to the just and punishments to the unjust, but he also seems to give delights to the wicked and harsh treatment to the good. Why should this be?” (Bunyan, 129) Lady Philosophy replies to him with the words of how us humans cannot understand the way things work in the world, only God does.

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