In Homer’s Odyssey, Odysseus men did deserve their punishment for eating Helios’s cattle because, well first of all do not eat first, you are supposed to ask first, if they say yes then eat, but if they say no, do not eat. All the trouble that the men got odyssey into, I really do think that they did deserve their punishment for all the things that they have done to get odyssey in trouble with all the gods. Well there's another thing Eurylochus convinces the men to eat the cattle of the sun. Then odysseus wakes up to find that the men has broken the oaths and killed some cattle, so it was the men falt. Even though they were starved, there is no reason to steal and kill a god's cattle.
Odysseus was a hero of the Trojan war, Aeneas a hero of Troy and Rome, Oedipus a king who accidentally married his own mother. They were all to a certain extent ordinary people who went through harsh life changing events throughout their journey to become the heroes society thought them to be. Even though they went through many challenging obstacles created by the gods themselves at times, they all seem to always accomplish what they were set to accomplish. Almost as if it was by bear fate. Nevertheless each and every one of them were set out to do something no matter how long it took or what happened in between.
God in Exodus and in the end of Genesis is proven to adhere to his word. His promise to Abraham was that if the covenant is obeyed, Abraham’s descendants will outnumber the stars and will have the land of Canaan. In order to obey the covenant, God has to free the Israelites from the rule of the Pharaoh. God sends Moses and Aaron to convince the Pharaoh that they are messengers from God and to release the Israelites at once. The Pharaoh does not believe them, so He enacts the ten plagues on the people of Egypt, with his final plague killing the firstborn of every household.
Additionally, religion plays out the same way today. As science uncovers so much more concrete information than we can possibly imagine, we become more attuned to these newer ideas and abandon the seemingly otherworldly ideas of religion. This theme fits very well with the text from the book of Exodus through
In this essay I will be talking about how temptation affects Odysseus and the rest of the characters in the story. I will be talking about how Odysseus is personally affected by the temptation. I will be talking about what Odysseus does to keep himself from falling for his desires. I will also be talking about how Odysseus helps himself in the end. Odysseus is a moral man.
More than that, he will have great fame in his homeland if he returns more than anywhere because he was a king of his country and people there know him, love and respect him after he went to the Trojan’s war, he had fame throughout the Greece as a man from Ithaca and if he returns his land even facing those struggles, his people from Ithaca will treat him like a god and sing the song for generation to generations. When he was sharing his story with Swinehard, he told him, “Over the years, you know, a man finds solace even in old sorrows, true, a man who’s weathered many blows and wandered many miles. My own story? This will answer all your questions. .
Author Ursula K. LeGuin has said, “It is good to have an end to journey toward, but it is the journey that matters in the end”. Her statement implies that striving toward a goal or overcoming obstacles associated with a goal defines us as human beings and is more important than the goal itself. This can be seen in Homer’s epic Odyssey. In the Odyssey, Homer uses Odysseus’s journey to show how one’s journey can affect them as a person. One way Odysseus's journey affected him is by making his overwhelming desire to get home his primary focus.
In the epic poem written by Homer, The Odyssey, the king of Ithaca named Odysseus sails home from the war at Troy. Along the way, he and his men encounter a lot of tedious obstacles. They go to Ismarus as well as discover the island of the Lotus, and the Lotus eaters who live on the island. Odysseus and his men also find a cyclops named Polyphemus, which they find out is the son of Poseidon. The land of Hades, or the land of the dead, is another place they travel to.
Similar to an odyssey life is a journey filled with daring conflicts, choices, and challenges that one has to overcome. In the novel The Odyssey, written by Homer, the main character Odysseus is faced with many testing challenges and difficult choices. During the issues he encounters Odysseus shows the characteristic perseverance to overcome the challenges. Persevering through challenges in life is similar to Odysseus and his journey.
Throughout history, God has been there for the Israelites. During Exodus 9-11, God was present when His people were in need. We can see how God calls, cares, and acts in support of the Israelites. The Israelites had given up hope and thought that even their own God could not take them out of slavery by the Egyptians. Previously, in Exodus 7-8, God sent out four plagues, releasing frogs, gnats, and flies upon Egypt.
Great Odysseus and his Journey Back in ancient Greece there were many storytellers and these storytellers loved to come up with great tales of men against mortals and mythical creatures. Many of these stories were about Odysseus. There were many stories of the brave Odysseus and all his men as they set foot on there long journeys. These stories of great Odysseus were told by travelers and quickly spread throughout the world.
Within these chapters I have read, I have learned about the ways of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob and learned how their lives were shaped by Jesus. Also reading on, I also learned that the goal of us being created, is redemption. God is revealed in a way that he is our redeemer but also a God who comes close to the poor and is with the brokenhearted. He is a God that sees everything. He is a God who is fully committed to his promise, and helps the town people out no matter their situation.
Here we learn part of the nature of God is that he confronts all evil amongst his people. After all the help God had given the Israelites, they still had sinful nature and rebelled against God. In his judgement he shows humanity that he is a God who loves good and hates evil. In relationship to the first theme, the second theme is God gives hope. For God’s covenant love and premise is more powerful than human evil.
God’s people has its origin during the promise God made to Abraham for him to be the father of many nations. The exodus is the great metaphor for God’s people. It is during this period that he created back his relationship with Israel. Also, the encounter at Sinai shows his great concern for his people in the wilderness. It is a great metaphor since it’s the beginning of God’s relationship with his chosen nation.
An angel came in Exodus 3:2 as a, “flame of fire out of the midst of a bush: and he looked, and, behold, the bush burned with fire, and the bush was not consumed.” Moses said, “I will now turn aside, and see this great sight, why the bush is not burnt.” God said to Moses that it was Him and to take off his shoes because he was standing on holy ground. Moses hid his face because he was afraid to look at God. God told Moses that He knew the sorrows of the children of Israel that were in slavery in Egypt, and He said in Exodus 3:8, “And I am come down to deliver them out of the hand of the Egyptians, and to bring them up out of that land unto a good land and a large, unto a land flowing with milk and honey; unto the place of the Canaanites, and the Hittites, and the Amorites, and the Perizzites, and the Hivites, and the Jebusites.