In Eugene O’Neil’s story “Days Without End,” John Loving, a Roman Catholic boy, prays that his parents, both of whom have been injured, might not die. But their lives were not saved by the kind of miracle he had expected and he loses his faith. Outwardly, at least, he becomes a skeptic and a cynic. Inwardly, however, John Loving keeps searching deeply for some answer. He tries Oriental religions, he tries philosophical cults, he joins secular meditation groups, he even becomes a member of an atheist club for a while. A friend of his – a priest – stands by him through it all. One evening, when John Loving and his priest friend are discussing the situation, John says, “A new savior must be born who will reveal to us how we can be safe from ourselves.” The priest replies, quietly, “You are forgetting that men have such a Savior, Jack. All they need is to remember Him.” But John Loving is not to remember…
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