Sophocles & Milton
Sophocles wrote his great works two and a half millennia ago, and yet today they are still fresh and powerful. This is because Sophocles deals with deep and important human situations and emotions. Even though we can no longer imagine what it would be like to live in the world which Sophocles inhabits, we can completely understand his characters because they are fully human and human nature does not change much over time. Though he writes about kings and queens and the wealthy of Greece, his characters have the sense of being representatives of every man and woman, in every era. His characters struggle with pride and with sin and with accepting the will of the gods -- when they do things they should not do, in the end they are punished, and accept this punishment. This gives them a greater morality than sinners who are portrayed in the media or in theatre as never reaping the consequences of their actions.
Sophocles means a great deal to me personally, because his writing embodies many of the most important aspects about being human and also covers aspects of religion that I approve of. I can identify with Sophocles because he was very religious, even as I am. My religion is different that Sophocles' in that I don't believe in an entire pantheon of gods, and I don't believe that the supreme deity has love affairs with countless virgins or sleeps with young cupholder boys. However, in his poems he doesn't really deal with these issues about Greek religion that I don't agree with. Instead, he focuses on those better aspects of his religions that have survived to this day. He focuses a lot of attention on the way in which all of our lives are predetermined by the gods, and how we can only hope to accept that rather than struggle against it. Perhaps the biggest spiritual lesson of Oedipus Rex is that we must submit ourselves to the will of deity, because resistance is futile and only brings more pain.
In order to understand how impressive it was that this idea was understood two and a half millennia ago, one should compare Sophocles' work to the work of a much more recent poet, Milton. Unlike Sophocles, Milton was intentionally writing about religious issues when he penned Paradise Lost. One assumes, since he was Christian, that he thought of Satan and his army of demons as the villains -- however, he has still made Satan so sympathetic and given so much of the space in the story to describing him that some people have thought that Satan was the hero of this book. Indeed, he might be. If Milton's Satan is contrasted with Oedipus Rex, one can see a definite shift between classical and proto-romantic thinking. Both have pride and hubris as their great fatal flaws, and both are visited with great pain and punishment. Afterwards, where Oedipus takes a religious stance and learns to humble himself before the will of the gods, Satan (also known as Lucifer or the fallen Arch Angel) only takes the suffering engendered by his own rebellion as a sign that he should rebel even more.
There are certain similarities between Oedipus and Satan that serve to highlight the differences. Both are, to some degree, tragic heroes because both fall from very high stations through the agency of their own tragic flaws, and both suffer greatly. The similarity between them is particularly strong in that both Oedipus and Satan have the same basic flaw, for in both cases it is their pride that brings them down. This is not merely a case of pride coming before the fall, but in each case pride actually causes the fall. Both Oedipus and Satan sin greatly, and both have some element of guilt which haunts them, as both are left degenerated and in great suffering.
The pride of both Satan and Oedipus is obvious. It was pride that caused Oedipus to kill his father when they met, because his father offered...
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