Catholic Faith In Flannery O Connor's Spirituality And Faith

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Flannery O’Connor’s Catholic faith shows heavily in her writing’s, but yet most of her characters are Protestant. Protestants fall under Western churches, and follow the principle of Reformation. Flannery wants her characters to suffer, to feel anguish and find redemption. While Flannery O’Connor has written many complex texts with different themes, her faith is always the fueling force behind her creativity. Contrary to popular belief, O’Connor’s notions have only widened her points of view in her writings. O’Connor uses faith in her work to show the readers spirituality and grace.

Flannery O’Connor’s feelings that her works should do something to show grace through faith is shown in many of her works. She shows that when something gets said …show more content…

Woodiwiss explains the idea of faith for O’Connor as being a totaling force, meaning it’s a huge or even main part of her stories. She claims that “the transition from one state of belief to another often comes as a shock to the person experiencing it” (Woodiwiss par. 1). Here she is referring to the revelations that O’Connor’s stories are known for and how she relates all the stories and epiphanies to grace and spiritual awareness. A great example of this is when the grandmother in “A Good Man is Hard to Find” has the shocking epiphany with The Misfit. The grandmother comes to the reality that she is quite like The Misfit in terms of her religious hypocrisy, as she is far too fixated on her material possessions and not fixated on her grace which can lead her to spiritual loss and loss of grace. An example of the “shock” that Woodiwiss mentions shows when the grandmother finds out that The Misfit has his doubts in Jesus’s ways. Similar scenarios are found all throughout O’Connor’s stories, such as in her short “The Displaced Person”, where the character Mrs. Shortley finds religious redemption just before death. Woodiwiss argues that “O 'Connor 's idea of salvation is "being exactly who one is" (Woodiwiss par. 2). This is an excellent analysis on the religious impact on O’Connor’s characters. Basically, this represents the moment when a character has a strong …show more content…

4). This is an excellent point, as it is clear that many of the characters O’Connor writes about-face tough or “harsh” moments, usually before they face a religious influenced climax. With this in life this is when most people come to find religion and grace in their lives. An excellent example of this involves the grandmother in “A Good Man is Hard to Find”, as she faces a traumatic accident and the murdering of her family. All these terrible things happen to the grandmother, just as she comes to a revelation that she is not in the right place with grace and spiritual awareness. This is what Flaum is pointing out, that O’Connor uses unique ways to express her beliefs within her work, often harshly. O’Connor also uses the concepts of nature to represent grace, or perhaps the opposite. O’Connor describes the landscape in “A Good Man is Hard to Find”, as being rather eerie. It’s a way of foreshadowing the events that will happen to the family. As Clark M. Brittain describes it, “the feeling that sinister forces have laid a trap for the doomed family” (Brittian par. 5). It seems like O’Connor uses the concept of God’s wraith, or some force of evil, both of the family’s faith. With a lack of grace in their lives the family appears as being doomed because of these

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