Monday, September 2, 2019
Finding Peace in Death Comes For The Archbishop Essay -- Archbishop
Finding Peace in Death Comes For The Archbishop     Ã     Ã  Ã   Willa Cather's Death  Comes For The Archbishop is a novel set in the nineteenth century in New  Mexico.Ã   The story follows the adventures of Father Vaillant and Father  Latour, two refined French priests on a mission to promote Catholicism in Santa  Fe.Ã   The story follows each man's experiences in these unrefined  surroundings causing them to go through dramatic changes as they experience the  westward movement of the frontier.Ã   Through the struggles and journeys of a  host of characters, we discover the underlying tensions of worldly distractions  that can create a divided character between oneself.     Ã       Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã   The first example of a divided character I  would like to discuss is that of the cardinals in Rome. It seems as if the heads  of the Catholic Church indulge in worldly possessions to fulfill their spiritual  desires.Ã   "...I had this wine brought up from my cellar especially to warm  away the chill of your twenty Canadian winters.Ã   Surely, you do not gather  vintages like this on the shores of the Great Lake Huron?"(9).Ã   These high  cardinals seem to have grown devoted to luxuries of life than to God and the  Catholic Church.Ã   This behavior contradicts the teachings of Catholicism  itself, where worldly matter is not of importance.Ã   This passage constructs  a clear warning to the reader, making it clear that these characters seem to  have jumped on the bandwagon of globalization, thus at times forgetting their  religious ties.Ã   It is hard to say if these cardinals have ever experienced  the meaning of true devotion to God, a point of faith where    material luxuries  have no value.Ã   Latour may be looked down upon to do the hard work of the  missions but his experie...              ... cathedral, distracting him from his mission to reach  the native people.Ã        Ã       Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã   Although Father Latour may possess few worldly  desires, one may argue he wants what others can benefit from as well as pleasing  himself.Ã   Along his journeys, Latour encounters various people, most  associates of the Catholic Church like himself.Ã   It seems as each time  Latour detects a sense of deceit in a person, he progresses in his own mission  of morality.Ã   When one is trying so hard to embrace and follow the rules  and restrictions of religion, as well as enjoy the worldly luxuries, a divided  character is created within oneself.Ã   It is not until true and total  devotion is committed to ones religion that material things become irrelevant  and one can be at peace.Ã  Ã  Ã        Ã       Work Cited:     Ã       Cather, Willa. Death Comes for the Archbishop. NY: Vintage Books,  1990.                      
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