Judaism, Christianity, Islam, and Dante´s: What Are We?

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Judaism, Christianity, Islam and Dante’s: What are we? The Inferno is the first part of Dante Alighieri's epic three-part poem, The Divine Comedy. In this poem, Dante develops many themes throughout the adventures of his travelers from political to religious. The Inferno is a poem that Dante used to explain and show his ideas of God's divine justice. Throughout this story religion comes up and shows the comparison of the different Hells and beliefs. This paper develops the connections between Christianity, Islam, and Judaism religion and the message presented in Dante’s Inferno. In the Inferno, Dante gives his audience the clear view as to what he believes as a Christian follower, that hell has to offer. He shows that worldly sin every single sin has a fair punishment. An example in Dante would be when Cocytus was frozen because he committed the cold crime of fraud. The deeper that Virgil and Dante go into hell, the greater volume of sin is committed. In each level of hell, the criminals are punished equally depending on what their crime was. Dante learns that God's punishment is just and that his power is divine. He sets forth one of the most fully developed Christian understanding of justice on this earth. He describes this justice as what we do as human beings will determine what happens to us when it is our time to go based on Gods judgment. An example of this divine power would be when the Furies will not let Dante and Virgil get past the Gate of Dis. Also in the Inferno, Dante’s take on hell and Islamic view of hell can be different. The Qur'an never mentions a complete and distinctly actual physical Hell like Dante portrays, but the Islam used allegory like Dante to portray the subject that is far be... ... middle of paper ... ...l felt and talked about today. He gives us the most widely known version of how Hell is portrayed today and it is said that when most people picture Hell, they think of the image that Dante explained. For some people today, this book is still taken very literally. Dante’s Inferno is seen as a lesson on what happens when you lead an immortal life. Work Cited Alexander Lee (2012). Defending Dante. [ONLINE] Available at: http://www.project-syndicate.org/blog/defending-dante. [Last Accessed 10 December 13]. David Lummus. Dante’s Inferno: Critical reception and Influence. [ONLINE] Available at: https://www.stanford.edu/dept/DLCL/cgi-bin/web/files/lummus-inferno-influence.pdf. [Last Accessed e.g. 10 December 13]. (2008). Infernos Quotes. [ONLINE] Available at: http://www.goodreads.com/work/quotes/2377563-inferno. [Last Accessed 10 December 13].

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