Frederick Douglass Loss Of Faith Essay

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It is not light that we need, but fire; it is not the gentle shower, but thunder. We need the storm, the whirlwind, and the earthquake. --Fredrick Douglass
“If the Lion told the Story”
In "Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass", Douglass uses his trials and tribulations to show that mental strength can overcome physical abuse while also showing us how faith is something that one must have to stay true to one’s self. “I was covered with blood. My hair was all clotted with dust and blood. I supposed that I looked like a man that had escaped from a lion’s den” (54). Fredrick Douglass once said reading and writing are the most important, most basic, and the most meaningful ways to grasp an understanding of life and self-expression.
While …show more content…

The bibles says “the just shall live by faith and not by bread alone.” (Hebrews 2:4) I know early in Fredrick’s life he was looking for that faith, that fullness of grace, the promise of God to never leave nor forsake him. And he soon found it. Fredrick ended up keeping faith in God because no matter the situation, there always seemed to be a way for him to overcome what many men in those days would have died from if put in the same situation. For example, Douglass writes: “I escaped death by the merest chance.” Later in his narrative Douglass is caught trying to escape from Covey’s plantation but is able to keep his life. Douglass ever gets into a brawl with his slave master. All these images that we are given in the narrative are so that we fully understand why Douglass battled with faith and also why after everything he is able to keep his faith in God. His ability to read and write also played a large part in him coming fully to faith. With these abilities he can interpret the bible anyway he would like. Fredrick now understood that without struggles there can be no true greatness. He stated this in his later years.
If there is no struggle, there is no progress. Those who profess to favor freedom, and yet depreciate agitation, are men who want crops without plowing up the ground. They want rain without thunder and lightning. They want the ocean without the awful roar of its many waters. This struggle may be a moral one; or it may …show more content…

His journey to freedom and redemption was one that could only have been made alone. To get where Fredrick finds himself he must have been able to think deeply, consciously, and with a full heart. This is because one false move could have gotten him beaten or even killed. On his journey Fredrick does show us that his better understanding of Christianity helps him with his fight for freedom. Fredrick wrote: “I prayed for twenty years but received no answer until I prayed with my legs” (“Category Archives: B. R. Ambedkar Quotes.”). Douglass is telling us that until we go out and get our own understanding, we will always be blind to what’s right in front of us. He is saying we can do all the praying we want for change, but until you help ourselves God won’t help you.
I don’t think he found a new faith, but I do know he did find knowledge. What the slave masters were telling the slaves wasn’t a lie, but it was written for different time, the bible was always meant to be transcribed and interpreted. For thousands of years there have been many transcriptions and changes to the words of God, For example, just in the last thousand years there has been three different transcriptions, The New Testament, Homer, and also Sophocles. For a person not to look for their own interpretation of the lord’s book is

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