Langston Hughes Research Paper

Words: 433
Pages: 2

One’s faith is determine by one’s parents. Children are taught to not question their parents about God; instead, they should question themselves. This is important especially in the south. Baptists and other Christians have a gathering in the evening time that may last a couple of days up unto a week called a revival where sinning souls go to get born again or saved. Langston Hughes and some more of his sisters and brothers in Christ were placed on the mourners’ bench during a revival. Langston was told Jesus was going to lead him to being born again and saved. As he sat patiently waiting on Jesus to come, his peers grew impatient and came forward. Due to his surroundings, he became confused and pressured into joining the church without seeing or hearing from Jesus. …show more content…
In his whole twelve years of life he was taught that before he was saved Jesus would come to him. While sitting in an uncomfortable church in an uncomfortable position, he watched the older church members that have claimed to see Jesus tell him and his peers to come to Jesus; he did not see Jesus. He grew confused and began to wonder why he had not seen Jesus like the others. Langston waited on any sign of Jesus, but there were not any. He grew numb to the fact that no one showed. By this time, others joined and he wondered if they had seen Jesus or if they had lied. As Langston Hughes sat in a hot, crowded church, he felt pressured by the adults in the church. While sitting in a hot crowded church with the congregation and preacher asking him and his peers ‘” won’t you come? Won’t you come to Jesus? Young lambs, won’t you come?”’ (158). Between the congregation, his aunt, and the preacher pressuring him into coming forward and looking at him eagerly he became upset. This affected Langston’s decision during the night of him being on the mourners’