The line that says "In worldly riches is all their mind: They fear not my righteousness, the sharp rod" because "worldly riches" refers to material gain.
Instead of worrying about their duties to God and what they would experience after death, they are more concerned with filling their lives with material, earthly pleasures.
Everyman is an allegorical drama that serves as a morality play, teaching viewers a lesson about how Christians should live and what they need to do to be saved
In essence, a morality play is an acted-out sermon. Characters in a conventional morality play might be personifications of virtues (like generosity and hope) or vices (like pride and laziness), or other traits, or they might be personifications of things (like money or activities) (such as death or fellowship). As they do in Everyman, God and angels might also play characters.
Learn more about Everyman brainly.com/question/4562581
#SPJ4
You might have a different mindset, things were more conservative and openly racist back in the day.
Hi there!
Thank you for posting your question on Brainly!
So, to put it simply, a hyperbole is a statement, but it’s not supposed to be taken literal. It’s an exaggeration. And you want one for thanksgiving... so it could be something like:
“The thanksgiving feast at my house was so big, it could’ve fed an army.”
Now we know that this person didn’t have enough food at that feast to feed an actual army, but from this hyperbole, we know that there was a lot of food at this feast.
Have a nice night and please contact me with any questions!
~Brooke
Whitman wanted to express that America is a country constituted by several parts that make a whole that works well. Each individual of the country doing their part is what forms the nation.
A choir is a group of people in which each one has a part to sing that might not be special on their own but form a harmony when they are sung together,
Wash your hands, not share food, cover your mouth when you cough, have updated vaccines, there's a lot of ways to avoid contamination to be honest.