The Path of the Redeemed

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The path of redemption and salvation presents itself with a different meaning for each character of The Poisonwood Bible. Their process of redeeming or deliverance from destruction shows itself in unique ways with all the characters. On a level it is the story of a family torn apart by the quest of “a man driven by guilt to save those unable to save themselves.” (Ender, Samantha) However after looking more closely at the characters within the family the realization that the children each represent multiple aspects of this “guilt driven man” and as the reader sees them change and grow the image of the changing points in his life. Barbara Kingsolver’s incorporation of multiple narrators provides more than enough evidence of the recurring themes of redemption and salvation while centrally focusing on the one person in the Price family who never speaks his story. In this paper, I will argue the personal salvation and redemption that Nathan Price struggles and ultimately fails to attain as he sets out into the Belgian Congo attempting to give them what he himself can never has, a chance.
The burden of guilt is something that everyone must overcome, but this is a burden that sometimes seems impossible to deal with. (Johnson, Kristina) As the story begins to unfold, the reader learns that Nathan is the only survivor of an expedition in war-torn Vietnam, and is attempting to “assuage his survivor’s guilt” by saving as many souls as he can. (Ergeton, Robin) He feels as though he is responsible for the death of his fallen comrades and should be punished for his life being spared due to an injury keeping him from losing his life. The only way for him to redeem himself for not dying like the rest of the soldiers is to save the souls of others...

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...olese. At some point his idea of redemption and what redemption actually is became two completely different things where his ideal is impossible to achieve.

Works Cited

Kingsolver, Barbara. The Poisonwood Bible. New York: Harpercollins, 1998. Print.
Ender, Samantha. "The Poisonwood Bible | Cultural Survival." The Poisonwood Bible | Cultural Survival. N.p., 26 Mar. 2010. Web. 13 Oct. 2012. .
"Dictionary, Encyclopedia and Thesaurus." The Free Dictionary. Farlex, n.d. Web. 18 Oct. 2012. .
Egerton, Robin. "A Literary Comparison: The Poisonwood Bible and The Historian." Suite101.com. N.p., 5 Aug. 2011. Web. 2 Nov. 2012.

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