Blog Post #2

  These three readings all relate in tone, each author does a great job introducing maturation, and making it acceptable. The Service of Faith and the Promotion of Justice in American Higher Jesuit Education relates growth and maturation amongst individuals who are seeking Jesuit education. This resides with me the most because as a college student at a Jesuit university I notice many similarities from this reading and my everyday encounters. The one saying that stuck out to me the most was also coined a formula, “the service of faith and promotion of justice”. This “formula” is extremely vital to the development of an individual as a whole. Specifically at Loyola with the mantra of “strong truths well lived”. These formulas and mantras serve as expectations and guidelines for individuals to live by who wish to seek and embrace maturation. Red Palm written by Gary Soto to me represents maturation of hard work, hence the title “red palm”. In this poem, the narrator is doing his best to keep his routine consistent, he’s also aware of how much he’s accomplished and how successful he’s become. In midst of all that he does, the author does a great job displaying the maturation the narrator embraces as he continues his routine reddening his palms furthermore. John Milton’s piece “When I consider how my light is spent” reflects maturation on a consistent basis. This poem felt like a self identification process. As the poem furthers the narrator becomes more content and satisfied with the way things are. This feeling is the driving factor behind maturation, it’s almost as if you reach a point of no return, but the only thing left to return is yourself.


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