Alex Barrios
Professor Conway
ENG 201 Sec. 0517
August 31, 2022
In the beginning young Langston started off as a believer in which he assumed Jesus was a physical being who would appear to those who are willing to be open with him. This is also supported by the fact that he was twelve going on thirteen at that time–which meant he was still considered a child.
However, by the end of the night he was left with a great sense of guilt and remorse. Not because he didn’t see Jesus or the light but due to him lying to his family and to all the adults in the church. The idea that he had to lie to his aunt who at one point was crying because she wanted her nephew to be “saved” didn’t sit well him later when he was home. The story also brought to my attention the notion of conformity. Langston and Westley for the most part seem like very honest kids. However they had to fake a religious experience to get out of a hot church, which leaves a person with a lot of questions and places much doubt on one’s faith overall.
One thought on “Alex Barrios Discussion 3”
Alex, thank you for starting things off again. Your comments are excellent and address the prompt very clearly. I, however, think that what most upsets the boy in the story is not his guilt although he definitely suffers from this. I think the real devastation is that he no longer believes in Jesus by the end of the story. But that doesn’t make your interpretation wrong.