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A Good Man Is Hard To Find Reflection

Satisfactory Essays

Austin Millender
Intro to Lit: 9:35 Tuesday & Thursday A Good Man Is Hard To Find
A Good Man is Hard To Find is a story that unveils the hypocrisy of modern Christian views, but also shows that you shouldn’t be so wrapped up in the past and that you need to learn to let things go. In A Good Man is Hard to Find, Flannery O’Connor makes it clear that everybody’s guilty of something. The family is about to embark on a vacation with Grandma who had already been complaining that she wanted to go to Tennessee, instead of Florida. She tried to convince her son, Bailey that they should go to Tennessee using the story of an escaped convict in the area to push the issue. Grandma does not get her way, except for being allowed to bring the cat. All …show more content…

All the while, throughout the story she’s very racist and ignorant. She then begins to think as if her nobility is what will get her out of the situation. However, the misfit is disinterested, regardless if she’s noble or not. Grandma realizes that she should try to reconcile with The Misfit and she begins to explain that he doesn’t look a bit common, that his parents must’ve been great people. At which point, The Misfit replies that they were good parents, and this is where we see that The Misfit is truly an average guy who isn’t a monster of any sorts, he is just lawless. Grandma then asks if The Misfit has tried praying and that she will pray for him, too. We discover that The Misfit was a gospel singer and he gives us one of the most compelling quotes in the story saying, “Jesus thrown everything off balance.” The misfit is referring to God/Jesus giving man the freedom to choose between good and evil and that he found no answers in religion as to why he should be good. He even hints that he was wrongfully placed in jail. After all, faith isn’t easy, so why should we follow a God that says “do good, when that God has done nothing but punish us for no reasons, if he performed miracles then you truly wouldn’t need anything more in life.” This theme of having the freedom to choose between good and evil is evident in Rappaccini’s Daughter and The Grand Inquisitor.
Before the Misfit

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