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Jealousy In The Iliad

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Love Your Enemy
“Cease from anger and forsake wrath… it leads only to evildoing” (New American Standard Bible, Psalm 37.8). The Bible tells us to refrain from displaying anger. Wrath benefits no one, and is therefore useless. Throughout Homer’s epic, The Iliad, fury is set forth as a major theme. Akhilleus’ fatal flaw is anger which brings hurt to all the Akhaians, gives victory to his enemies, and later turns the tide of the battle in his favor; this wrath resides in all fallen mankind as a result of the sin nature. Akhilleus’ greatest character flaw and defining quality is his all-consuming anger. This emotion is prominently displayed throughout the poem. The Iliad opens with the “song… [of] Akhilleus’ anger” toward Agamémnon, his king (1.1). …show more content…

In rapid succession, champions of the Danáäns are put out of battle from wounds they receive. In fact, Odysseus faces “great trouble” and almost dies fighting to defend the ships (11. 534). Moreover, despite the Akhaians’ vast numbers, Hektor and his Dardans slaughter them while Akhilleus rests in his tent. Though victory is eventually guaranteed for the Argives, they needlessly experience mass death and slaughter because of the wrath of the son of Pêleus. Among those slaughtered is Patróklos, closest to Akhilleus’ heart, bringing “irreparable loss and grief to the Danáäns” (17. 778). In the wake of Akhilleus’ anger toward Agamémnon, Hektor and the Trojans have free reign over the course of the …show more content…

According to Romans, “through one man sin enter[s] into the world” (5.12). Because of Adam’s decision to disobey God, sin becomes an inherent part of all mankind. All the evil in this world can be traced back to the original sin in the Garden. Likewise, Jeremiah writes: “The heart is more deceitful than all else and is desperately sick” (17.9). As a result of the Fall, humans are depraved and strive to do what is wrong in God’s sight. Man is corrupted to the extent that the intents of the thoughts of his heart are evil. The rage of Akhilleus and all other vices prevailing today find their root in the institution of sin by

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