1 / 17

The Moral of the Story

The Moral of the Story. Lessons from The Odyssey. The Greek Textbook and Bible. For the Greeks, The Iliad and The Odyssey were the foundation of their education. For Greek schoolboys, these books were their: Textbooks “Bibles” Entertainment. Training Young People.

zanna
Download Presentation

The Moral of the Story

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The Moral of the Story Lessons from The Odyssey

  2. The Greek Textbook and Bible • For the Greeks, The Iliad and The Odyssey were the foundation of their education. • For Greek schoolboys, these books were their: • Textbooks • “Bibles” • Entertainment

  3. Training Young People • Teachers and parents would use these stories to raise the new generation. • What lessons do you think they could teach from The Odyssey? • Think. • Pair. • Share.

  4. Lessons for Each Stop • Each adventure Odysseus can be used to teach a lesson. • We will look at some of them. • Lotus Eaters • Cyclops / Aeolia • Circe • Hades • Sirens • Scylla and Charybdis • Helios’s cattle

  5. Lotus Eaters • Narcotics are dangerous and addictive. • Distractions can cause us to never want to complete our goals.

  6. Cyclops and Aeolia • Curiosity can be dangerous. • Often you need to think your way out of a situation, rather than fight your way out. Brain and brawn. • Follow through on your objectives. • Don’t almost finish. Finish.

  7. Circe • Lust can turn people into animals. • You can get too comfortable. • Stay loyal amid the worst temptations.

  8. Hades • You sometimes need to experience the worst to get the best. • We can always learn from the past. • Heb. 12:1

  9. Sirens • Some things sound good but aren’t. • Find a way to avoid temptation. • Don’t simply trust your strength to withstand it. • Keep going. Do not rest on past accomplishments.

  10. Scylla and Charybdis • This is where we get the expression “between a rock and a hard place.” • Sometimes you have to decide between two tough options. • Avoiding one problem may lead you to another. • Trust God to get you out.

  11. Helios • Obey the rules. • Remember your responsibilities. • Don’t allow other people to ruin things for you. • Seemingly small actions can have huge consequences.

  12. Main Lesson • Life is about having a goal and overcoming obstacles to reach that goal. • Obstacles come in different ways. • Some are self-inflicted. • Some are from other people. • Some are from “the gods.”

  13. Overcoming Obstacles • Some obstacles are self-inflicted. • What are examples from The Odyssey of self-inflicted obstacles? • Odysseus’s pride. • Others? • What are examples from our lives of self-inflicted obstacles? • Procrastination

  14. Overcoming Obstacles • Some obstacles come from others. • What are examples from The Odyssey of other people being obstacles? • Cicones. Aeolus’s winds. • Others? • What are examples from our lives of obstacles that others present? • Betrayal, drama…

  15. Overcoming Obstacles • Some obstacles come from the “gods.” • What are examples from The Odyssey from the gods? • Storms, Helios’s cattle? • Others? • What are examples from our lives of obstacles that we cannot help? • Our birth, our circumstances…

  16. Overcoming Obstacles • How does Odysseus overcome the obstacles in his path? • The gods help? His own efforts? • How can we overcome the obstacles in our lives?

More Related