To be completely cheesy, does anyone remember Twenty One Pilots' song Car Radio? It addresses the problem with silence. If humanity is forced to sit and think with no input - no one talking, no music playing, no television blaring - then it will be forced to address itself. In the case of Rodrigues,
there is an underlying theme: silence from God. In the quiet moments, he has to ask himself if God is going to be silent forever. He wonders why there are such oppressions placed on the Christians in Japan. Even Jesus on the Cross asked "Why, God, why? Why have you forsaken me?" This burden of feeling alone when there is no audible response is an inevitable part of humanity. What I find interesting that is every time there is emotional/spiritual violence in Rodrigues's life, there are cicadas. I don't know if that's just a weird detail that has no significance to the story, but it's detailed in the heaviest moments of the story. Cicadas are specifically mentioned when Rodrigues is questioning God "Why?", and when he is originally brought for "cross-examination". On a slightly related note, think of the sea. When you go to the beach, there is the inevitable screech of seagulls, and the peaceful roar of the waves breaking against the sand. But when Mokichi and Ichizo are martyred, the sea is described to "surge on uncannily - in silence." It's a sobering thought to picture the powerful sea as silent. I don't believe it was audibly silent, but emotionally silent; it made Rodrigues face his own conscience and faith. He was bound to wonder, in the wake of this martyrdom, if he would choose to apostatize should the decision fall on him one day.
PS I commented on Ezra's and Becca's
PS I commented on Ezra's and Becca's
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