A Morally Confused Society

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Throughout The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, Mark Twain tells the story of Huck Finn who constantly finds himself surrounded by morally strong people and others who go without morals.After Living with widow Douglas and then leaving with Jim, he feels that superstition provides proof where as christianity does not. Living on the river with Jim influences him. He looks up to Jim and feels that he is his true friend. Cohen Ralph said, “… in their relationship, a love and respect for persons regardless of color or knowledge or beliefs.” In The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, Twain illuminates the shortcomings of organized religion.
Mark Twain shows his personal beliefs on religion by using Huck and Jim. Twain obviously feels that religion is useless and ineffective, and the character Huck feels the same way in the novel. As widow Douglas tries to “transform” huck into a proper church-going young boy, he completely looses his interest in Christianity. He feels that it has no way to prove its self. While he is still living with widow Douglas, he tells the reader that, “Then miss Watson she took me in the closet and prayed, but nothing come of it. She told me to pray everyday, and whatever I asked for I would get it. But it warn't so”(Twain 8). Here Huck thinks of miss Watson to be a wonderful christian, but yet her theory on prayer does not work. He finds this “prayer” to be of no effect to him other than a waste of time. In the novel he tells the reader that miss Watson took out her Bible and read about Moses, he tells us:
…I was in a sweat to find out all about him, but by and by she let it out that Moses had been dead a considerable long time; so then I didn’t care no more about him; because I don’t take no stock in dead peop...

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... were listening that, in his mind, unborn children are not humans, and he sees nothing wrong with slaughtering millions of unborn children every year.”
Twain shows that there can be moral confusion in a society. Cohen Ralph said, "... in Huckleberry Finn, by which the characters arrive at the most profound moral decisions." Twain has shown that it is more important for Huck to live his life freely rather than to be closed in by religion.

Works Cited

Cohen Ralph. "Games: A key to understanding Huckleberry Finn. Games and Growing up (1965):

Rpt. in reading on The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn. Ed. Kadie Koster San Diego: Green haven

Press, 1994,print.

Twain, Mark. The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn. New York; sterling, 2006. print.

http://canadafreepress.com/index.php/article/61036
By Rev. Michael Bresciani (Bio and Archives) Saturday, February 8, 2014

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