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Narrative Essay On Salvation

930 Words4 Pages

“Salvation”

Coming from a small town I know what it is like to want to conform. There have been many occasions where I have second-guessed what I believed because the people I was surrounded by thought differently. Being with the same people for so long has proved difficult in trying to form my own beliefs. Growing up with access to the Internet I have had the ability to read many conflicting topics. Due to this, I have changed my beliefs multiple times; sometimes unsure if it was truly what I believed. Social media consumes the lives of many, it is accessible at any given moment and voices of many are heard. However, it is a challenge to embrace one’s own beliefs because of popular opinion. With access to so many different viewpoints it can be difficult to stand up to the pressure of others and sustain the same beliefs. Our culture is built on …show more content…

As a young boy Langston is impressionable and wishes to please. Langston is expected to accept what his aunt tells him because she is an adult, and he is just a child. The emotional pressure he receives from his aunt and the people of the congregations is overwhelming. He sincerely wants to satisfy his aunt and holds the belief that he will physically see Jesus. He is naïve and convinced that, “…when you were saved, you saw a light, and something happened to you inside! And Jesus came into your life!” (Hughes 161). This young boy has a preconception of what is going to happen at the revival; this causes him disappointment and ultimately is the source of him losing his faith. Langston is “saved” by his desire to adhere to the mold that his aunt and the congregation around him have set up. His aunt does not explain what it really means to accept Jesus or what is going to happen. He misinterpreted her words, therefore leaving him to sit and wait for something miraculous to

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