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John MiltonA modern alternative to SparkNotes and CliffsNotes, SuperSummary offers high-quality Study Guides with detailed chapter summaries and analysis of major themes, characters, and more.
It might be easier for a contemporary audience familiar with the cultural attitudes toward those with disabilities to understand the poem’s thematic concern with blindness. But it is difficult for a contemporary audience, Christian or otherwise, in which the culture has so radically reconceived of the Christian God to understand the depth and conviction of the Puritan Christian perception of God’s place in the cosmos. God’s place is absolute. In a contemporary culture where religion itself has been appropriated and then weaponized by self-serving politicians and self-appointed faux-prophets, or where religion has been trivialized into a trite expression of self-promotion and ego, or where religion has been simplified to a bland ritual with little conviction save routine, Milton’s poem positions God at the center of, well, everything. His grace cannot be earned, His love cannot be assumed, His attention cannot be secured by any—any—efforts of His creations. The majesty and sovereignty of God demands the capitalized pronoun He.
At the heart of Milton’s sonnet is the reassurance, difficult for a contemporary culture to fully embrace, that God’s love is anything but unconditional. God so oversees the entirety of his Creation that no individual entity, no tiny fragment of His providential care can assert anything without His foreknowledge and approval.
By John Milton
Areopagitica
Areopagitica
John Milton
Comus
Comus
John Milton
Lycidas
Lycidas
John Milton
On the Late Massacre in Piedmont
On the Late Massacre in Piedmont
John Milton
Paradise Lost
Paradise Lost
John Milton
Paradise Regained
Paradise Regained
John Milton
Samson Agonistes
Samson Agonistes
John Milton