Huck Finn Morally Right Analysis

Words: 854
Pages: 4

There is a Way That Seems Right To a Man
"All Scripture is breathed out by God and profitable for teaching, for reproof, for correction, and for training in righteousness" In Huck Finn’s world, Everyone learns right from wrong from the slave owning community that think of black people as unintelligent, incapable of noble qualities, and inferior to them. This influence is exhibited in many ways throughout this story. During Huck’s journey down the river, he is shown to make many good decisions based from his own experience and coming to his own conclusions. Mark Twain shows this to be the most important of moral sources. While Huck Finn is travelling down the mississippi with Jim and the Duke and King, he is faced with many important decisions that cause him to reconsider his moral code. He sees the
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No friends, no family, no church. Man is sinful and it is impossible to make all the right conclusions on our own. In genesis, the bible says that life was not meant to be lived alone, our church family and friends can help us make important decisions and give us a new perspective while we might be irrational and blinded by the moment and emotion. In Proverbs 14:12 it says that there is a way that seems right to a man, but its end is the way to death. We might think we are perfectly reasonable and are doing the right thing, while being completely wrong. Proverbs 27:17 states that iron sharpens iron as one man sharpens another. With the help of God's word and the guidance of peers and our elders we can make more of the right decisions. Huck's world is a work of fiction, perfectly crafted, refined example, where it is easy to illustrate any point you want. That is what is good about writing. Yet I think in real life that one must not be self reliant because that will never work in our sinful