Friday, July 19, 2019
Comparing Relationships Between Gods and Men in Prometheus Bound and Job :: Comparison Compare Contrast Essays
The Relationships Between Gods and Men in Prometheus Bound and Job     Ã     Ã  Ã  Ã   The question of  why bad things happen to good people has perplexed and angered humans throughout  history. The most common remedy to ease the confusion is to discover the  inflicter of the undeserved suffering and direct the anger at them: the horror  felt about the Holocaust can be re-directed in the short term by transforming  Adolf Hitler into Lucifer and vilifying him, and, in the long term, can be used  as a healing device when it is turned into education to assure that such an  atrocity is never repeated. What, however, can be done with the distasteful  emotions felt about the victims of Hiroshima and Nagasaki? Surely the citizens  of those two cities did not themselves directly provoke the government of the  United States to deserve the horror of a nuclear attack. Can it be doubted that  their sufferings were undeserved and should cause deep sorrow, regret, and  anger? Yet for the citizens of the United States to confront these emotions they  must also confront t   he failings of their own government. A similar problem is  found in two works of literature, Aeschylus' Prometheus Bound and the book of  Job found in the Tanakh. In each of these works a good man is seen to be  suffering at the hand of his god; Prometheus is chained to a rock by Zeus who  then sends an eagle to daily eat Prometheus' liver while Job is made destitute  and brought to endure physical pain through an agreement between God~ and Satan.  To examine the travails of these two men is to discover two vastly different  concepts of the relationship between god and man.      Ã       The first question which must be addressed is, "Why have these men been made  to suffer?" To simply say that Zeus or God is displeased is not enough, and to  say that Prometheus and Job have sinned is confusing. Most Western readers  approach these works with a pre-conceived notion of sin which has been born out  of the Judeo-Christian theological tradition a tradition which dictates that  there are specific moral rules which must be followed, and to transgress them is  to sin. While this interpretation of sin may be functional for a reading of Job,  it is useless for understanding Prometheus Bound.  					  Comparing Relationships Between Gods and Men in Prometheus Bound and Job  ::  Comparison Compare Contrast Essays  The Relationships Between Gods and Men in Prometheus Bound and Job     Ã     Ã  Ã  Ã   The question of  why bad things happen to good people has perplexed and angered humans throughout  history. The most common remedy to ease the confusion is to discover the  inflicter of the undeserved suffering and direct the anger at them: the horror  felt about the Holocaust can be re-directed in the short term by transforming  Adolf Hitler into Lucifer and vilifying him, and, in the long term, can be used  as a healing device when it is turned into education to assure that such an  atrocity is never repeated. What, however, can be done with the distasteful  emotions felt about the victims of Hiroshima and Nagasaki? Surely the citizens  of those two cities did not themselves directly provoke the government of the  United States to deserve the horror of a nuclear attack. Can it be doubted that  their sufferings were undeserved and should cause deep sorrow, regret, and  anger? Yet for the citizens of the United States to confront these emotions they  must also confront t   he failings of their own government. A similar problem is  found in two works of literature, Aeschylus' Prometheus Bound and the book of  Job found in the Tanakh. In each of these works a good man is seen to be  suffering at the hand of his god; Prometheus is chained to a rock by Zeus who  then sends an eagle to daily eat Prometheus' liver while Job is made destitute  and brought to endure physical pain through an agreement between God~ and Satan.  To examine the travails of these two men is to discover two vastly different  concepts of the relationship between god and man.      Ã       The first question which must be addressed is, "Why have these men been made  to suffer?" To simply say that Zeus or God is displeased is not enough, and to  say that Prometheus and Job have sinned is confusing. Most Western readers  approach these works with a pre-conceived notion of sin which has been born out  of the Judeo-Christian theological tradition a tradition which dictates that  there are specific moral rules which must be followed, and to transgress them is  to sin. While this interpretation of sin may be functional for a reading of Job,  it is useless for understanding Prometheus Bound.  					    
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