poems showing religious beliefs
im writing an essay on what impressions i get of blakes religious beliefs. which five poems in blake's songs of innocence and experience show what blakes religious beliefs were... :confused: basically... anyone know WHAT his religious beliefs were.. he believed in God? but not the church...~???? whats the difference, and if those who were in the church, shouldnt he have 'believed' in what they were doing? and do the poems such as 'the lamb' and 'tyger' really answer his religious beliefs?
Thanks!! xxx
Blake's Religious Beliefs
Well, those are pretty big questions. Questions Blake spent a lifetime answering himself.
"he believed in God? but not the church...~???? whats the difference, and if those who were in the church, shouldnt he have 'believed' in what they were doing?"
He was a Christian. But not a normal Chiristian. His idea of God had a lot to do with imagination. For Blake, the Church and believing in God were not the same thing. The Church is political. God is not. One of the main messages in the Gospels is that each person can have direct contact with God. People don't need a Church to communicate with God. Through prayer, imagination, good deeds, etc, humans can communicate directly with God. The Church is a middle man. He believed that England had fallen and would be redeemed. This is expressed in his idea of the New Jerusalem.
Blakes beliefs are complicated. Many people struggle to understand him. He was a 'mystic' poet. He created his own form of Christianity. It had much to do with the imagination. He lived in a time, like ours, when people were very taken with Science. He was a prophet in that he was reminding people to remember the worlds that are invisible, that we can not access through our minds, but only with our hearts.
In 'The Lamb' look at the last verse. He answers the question.
In 'The Tyger' the word 'frame' is important. To frame something is to contain it.
Did he smile his work to see?
Did he who made the Lamb make thee?
Look at the question and look at the lamb. Are human's better than animals?
Blake urges people in his poems to use their imaginations. When people do this, they are closer to God.