Essay On Elie Wiesel's View Of God

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The Holocaust changed a lot of people’s minds about how they view God. Though the Holocaust was devastating overall there is much controversy whether or not God was present in the lives of everyone during the time. Was God present before and during the Holocaust or was he the cause of the Holocaust? Those afraid of him before and after the Holocaust influenced those who did believe fore the worse. Some people in particular drastically changed their minds about God from before and after the Holocaust. Elie’s journey in faith had gone from eagerness to learn more about Him to absolutely despising God.
At first, the Jews were going to receive the greatest test they could have ever imagined. Everyone believed that the Lord was powerful enough to spare them, “Oh God, Lord of the Universe, take pity upon us in Thy great mercy…” (Wiesel 17). The persecuted people had hope in their God. Elie thought that if God wanted to he could protect them from a …show more content…

While living the worst times of his life, Elie never found a God as powerful as the one before the Holocaust, “Never shall I forget those moments which murdered my God and my soul and turned my dreams to dust” (Wiesel 32). There was now no hope for Elie, any hope did have for a future had died along with the once-powerful God. The Lord was pushed away by Elie because he was not getting fast rescuing like he expected from a God who always has a plan. God had gone away just as the Jews in the camp were slowly dying. This was another major end point to Elie’s faith journey. The God Elie had once spent hours learning about had left him on his own and was just somebody he used to know. There was no one to protect him, no one to go to get comfort, and no one just to talk to. Elie saw a future in which he was involved with the mighty God, which after God’s death was never going to happen. In his greatest time of need, Elie was abandoned by

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