Les Miserables: Grace Received
I’ve just watched this amazing movie (pun intended), and as great as it is, with so many different high points and themes portrayed, the representation of Grace really resonated with me. Spoiler Alert!!! If you haven’t seen the movie yet and you were looking forward to it, you should probably not read on just yet. Grace surrounds three main characters: The paroled prisoner on the run, the priest, and the officer just doing his job. Wolverine (I’ll always see Hugh Jackman in that light…) is enslaved for 19 years for a menial crime. The system is hostile and unjust, victimising the poor. On his release from prison, everyone treats him like he has the plague; mocking him and mistreating him. In response, he becomes hardened. Then the priest steps in and offers him grace. Grace is often described as ‘getting what you don’t deserve’. The priest offers him a place to stay and a meal. But Wolverine is still in his hardened state and does not trust the realness of this free gi