Skip to main content

Owning Up. You Can Even Call It a Confession. - Addison Zanda

 In the beginning of Book V, we see the idea of what confession is meant to be, "Heal all my bones and let them say Lord, there is none like you." Many times in life, most all of us seem to have a slight and even strong struggle of the idea of confessing. Its not that we hate doing it, its just human nature to not having that feeling of being wrong. If you think about it, there's a stage on confession that are steps from sorrow to action. Looking at this from a Christian perspective, we constantly fail to admit we have sinned, done wrong to one, or have committed a crude action toward ourselves that result in sorrow. If we look in the book of Ezra, the people committed wrong actions. Ezra 10 is a complete story about the owning up to the wrongdoing of their actions. The people owned up and asked for help to make things right with God. Making things right doesn't necessarily involve an apology. It involves a true change in attitude and actions. If you've somehow blown it with God, someone else, or even feel like you've messed up alone... what are you exactly doing about it? How are you changing and becoming stronger in that area of life? Are you committed to the change? If you're having trouble, here's some things to think about: humble yourself in admitting you've done wrong, simply ask God to forgive you, and even reject harmful habits. 


I commented on Braylan and Leanne’s post.

Comments

  1. I love this! I personally almost always struggle with admitting that I am in the wrong, making confession a very difficult process. It seems almost relieving to be reminded of what confession is supposed to look like, even if I don't always get it right.

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

Word Painting in Vesta—Lily Caswell

  Word painting in Weelkes’s As Vesta Was from Latmos Hill Descending is quite interesting. And because that is a really long title, I’m calling it Vesta from now on. Word painting is basically when the melody matches up with the lyrics. So in Vesta, when it says “ascending” and “descending”, there are obviously scales going up and down. The madrigal was written for six voices to sing unaccompanied, so when they start to come together, it matches with the lyrics; so if the lyric says “two by two”, there are only two voices; “three by three” there is another voice added, and so forth. All the parts combine in exclamation before Vesta before it is left “all alone” to the highest soprano. All the way to the end of the piece, word painting continues when shouts of “Long live fair Oriana” with the bass sustaining long notes. Word painting in and of itself is a highly interesting topic because a musician takes the words of a poem or a sonnet and writes a melody line that pertains to cer...

Welcome to Honors! (Please Read This)

     Welcome to Honors! My name is Abbie Hedden and I serve as President of Honors. Jamie Peters is our Vice President, and Caroline Tucker is our Secretary. I look forward to getting to know all of you in class during this upcoming year! There are a few things you need to know about Honors.      There are no quizzes or tests in Honors. Grades are provided based on attendance/class participation, blogs, explication papers, and the research paper. The papers will be addressed at a later date, as they aren't due until later in the semester. However, there is a blog post due every week. Bearing that in mind, here are the requirements! Criteria Blog posts are due Monday at 11:59PM , and comments are due Tuesday at 9:29AM . DO NOT BE LATE ON ASSIGNMENTS. Points WILL be deducted from late assignments! Be sure to have your name in your Blogger profile Blog posts should include at least one to two paragraphs on that week’s reading assignment.  Blog posts shoul...

The Dark Side of Justice // Jessef Leslie

  When we hear the word justice we think of righteousness, piety, and triumph. The feeling it brings is one of the good guy winning and the bad guy being put in his place. The issue in these definitions and connotations is they leave out vengeance. Vengeance is a part of justice just like odd numbers are a part math and it isn't to be left out. In The Eumenides by Aeschylus, vengeance is personified as three female deities called Furies " Apollo: 'Gorgons I'd call them; but then with Gorgons you'd see the grim, inhuman... These have no wings, I looked. But black they are, and so repulsive. Their heavy, rasping breath makes me cringe. And their eyes ooze a discharge, sickening, and what they wear - … sacrilege!'" (Aeschylus, (Robert Fagles, 232). They are described as nasty almost human like creatures seen as evil. They chase Orestes, Agamemnon's son, for murdering his mother. The Furies represent his mother's, Clytemnestra, rage and revenge as he...