Through the use of very detailed language in her paper, Ehrenreich was able to make the experiences she had while working as a waitress and housecleaner seem much more real and personal to the reader. Instead of describing how she felt while working as a waitress and housekeeper, she made the reader go through (almost) the same feeling by describing the situations she was put into. While expressing her emotions would have made the reader wonder what she was saying, describing the horrible situations under which she worked made the reader feel her emotions with her. Through her use of strong language, Ehrenreich was able to force the reader to identify with her and how she felt, not just understand what she is saying.…
The title of Nash’s book is fitting for the content in which it contains. One will not find the traditional arguments that come with Soteriology. Initially, the author thought that he would be reading a book that covers a topic that had been written numerous times and so pleasantly surprised with its content. Nash begins his book with an introduction to three main philosophical views when it comes to the redemptive work of Jesus Christ. Nash does a great job in succinctly defining each of the three main philosophical views. Those views are pluralism, inclusivism, and exclusivism.…
Because God loves us, He sent his only Son and let Him die. He also revels to us that love needs to be encountered, and experienced in order to not to be senseless. We see ethical discovery of our dignity in the image of God. As mentioned above, the document also highlighted the importance of human dignity as one of the main roots for the Church and its activity; “the dignity that each human being has Page 3 reached and can continually reach in Christ, namely the dignity of both the grace of divine adoption and the inner truth of humanity, a truth which-if in the common awareness” (RH12). This great truth is one of Church's basic messages to everyone in the world, showing that God truly loves us. A new life is given by redeeming mankind and erasing the past. Church wants everyone to find Christ “in order that Christ may walk with each person the path of life, with the power of the truth about man and the world” (RH 14). Life which is connected by the mystery of incarnation and redemption. As the Pope wrote, “Christ, the new Adam, in the very revelation of the mystery of the Father and of his love, fully reveals man to himself and brings to light his most high calling" (RH 9). Christ provides us with freedom and…
One of the greatest mystics in the Christian tradition is John of the Cross. He is a man of great humility who in the face of persecution remained faithful to the Church and produced some of the greatest spiritual classics of all time. In this paper I will focus specifically on “The Dark Night of the Soul” in which John of the Cross explains how the soul is able to attain perfect union with God. In order to better understand this work I will offer a brief explanation of the life of John of the Cross and attempt to explain the historical context in which he lived. The purpose of this paper is to introduce to a parish audience one of the church’s greatest mystical authors in order to enrich their lives and lead them closer to God.…
liberation to the essence of the gospel, which is Jesus Christ.” (pp. 1) James H. Cone stresses the…
Entiwistle, D. (2010). Integrative Approaches to Psychology and Christanity: An Introduction to World view issues, Philosophical Foundations, and Models of Integration. Eugene: Wipf and StockPublishers.…
When you look around and gaze at the beautiful creation before you, do you reflect on how amazing God is? God made the creation, man, and everything surrounding the two. There are many different worldviews. This paper will focus on the Christian worldview. The Christian worldview involves God, humanity, Jesus, and restoration.…
In the following paragraphs, I will analyze and critique the article “The Resurrection of Christ: Theological Implications” by Daniel B. Wallace. Wallace’s main purpose in writing this article is to stress importance of the Resurrection of Christ and its impact on the Christian faith. Wallace is theologically sound in supporting his views and held a bit of humor to his arguments.…
Sartre believes that in order for anything to have a function, its existence must come prior. For example, the function of a knife, which is to stab and cut, did not come before the existence of the knife. The saying “existence precedes essence” is Sartre’s answer for the objection saying that Existentialism is pessimism. Sartre says no, existence is not pessimistic but instead it is optimistic. An individual does have action and choice to how they want to live their life and that there can be meaning. Existence can be described as biological, while essence can be known as a social form that an individual picks up through interaction. Even though an individual cannot choose who they are biological…
The Christian worldview provides some essential elements that need to be understood, in order for this worldview to be accepted. These elements consist of God, humanity, Jesus, and being able to analyze what you understand about these elements. In this essay I will help you understand who God is and some of some of his characteristics. I will also let you know who Jesus is and why he died for the sins of the world. I will tell you why God created humanity, and the Christian worldview purpose is for humanity. God’s ultimate plan in the Christian worldview is restoration. I will explain why restoration is necessary in the Christian worldview, the solution to the human problem and what role grace and faith play in this worldview. Then I will analyze some benefits or strengths of Christian belief, what I find confusing about this worldview and how Christianity can influence a person’s thinking and behavior. I will also provide my opinion of the Christian worldview by letting you know my belief, and how I live my life according to my beliefs.…
Every person in the world has one thing in common and that one thing is death. Not many people want to face the fact that everyone will die at a certain point in time until that time is brought among them. Existentialism is the theory of being a living human individual and that ultimately life is meaningless because the world keeps moving on when death occurs. This theory is prevalent in the novel The Stranger by Albert Camus and the film Office Space by Mike Judge. In The Stranger a shipping clerk named Mersault lives his life without caring about societal standards and he believes that having faith in a higher god is a waste of his time. In Office Space a man named Peter Gibbons is programmer at a software company called Initech, he is fed up with a job and the lifestyle that he is living in. Although the characters in The Stranger and Office Space inflict with different plots and people, they share the same indifference to the world, choose their own path, and accept the consequences of their decisions.…
First appearing on page 11, the recurring phrase, “so it goes” is the narrator’s signal a character’s life has passed, or is currently passing. The repetition of the words highlights that time is perpetually continual, Vonnegut employs this technique in order to show the death and war that arrive with time are also inevitable. And, to remind his audience that one must either accept them or be terminally struck with the grief that comes with both. Concurrently, it reveals the errors in Pilgrim’s existentialist philosophy allegedly learned from the Traflamadorians, or the cyclopean beings from the dimension of time. Which explains that if someone is dead in one moment, they were alive at one point and can be visited through thought and time…
against tradition', or 'know your station'? They say that man is base and doomed to fall, he…
The Main issue with J.P. Sartre's Existentialism with both Communists and Christians seems to be that that the Communists and Christians do not accentuate enough on individualism compared to the, and that the world is big and hence society must be a whole and equal. Christians believe that life is a gift from God, and hence Sartre's existentialism seems to undermine Christian belief that life is God's gift, when existentialism tends to show reality of life which would show the depressive, bleak, unfair side of life. Sartre believed himself that the Christians believed that existentialism would be denying the existence of God and of God's moral law, and by destroying moral laws would supposedly lead to Anarchy, of which I personally disagree…
“Let us make our future now, and let us make our dreams tomorrow’s reality,” said by Malala Yousafzai, follows Jean-Paul Sartre’s existential idea of creating your own future. On the other hand, the idea of those who cannot create their own future and has to depend on others to make it is called bad faith. In Franz Kafka’s book, Metamorphosis, the main character, Gregor, can be seen following Sartre’s idea of existentialism. For example, in chapter three of the book, Gregor creeps out of his room to listen to Grete play her violin, while the family and the tenants were minding their own business. Even though Gregor was forced into only staying in his room, he takes a risk and disobeys his family, so that he can take his last moments listening…