Everyone's drama and the second shepherd remind the audience that good deeds are necessary for redemption, yet we reinforce the idea that we must avoid redemptive material issues. Both theaters will reinforce these aspects of redemption, so that everyone can redeem them. The only way we can make ourselves perfect and make it worthy of redemption is not to worry about our material happiness and good behavior. We ignore our material concern which allows us to do good things.
The game for everyone and the second shepherd contains ideas on how the medieval people saw the rest of the world. One of the ideas is how each game feels about the state of the world. "Now I see the people abandoning cleanly ... seven sins ... now in this world" It will be worthy of praise ... Because everyone is alive, his own After happiness ... I get worse every year to the point I can endure. "From the beginning of everyone, we emphasize the world, the state of poverty on the ground gives God the reason to make a general estimate of the general public, but basically about adding that passage to the play A belief is that the world is in such a bad state that it can end at any time.The belief still exists in society today.The author of the play plays the emotions of the times into the moral information in the drama I use it as a good reason for emphasis.
"Games for everyone and the second shepherd" explains some of the medieval unique perspectives by expressing them in the context of drama. Since playwrights record the emotions of their times so that today's playwrights write down those who think they are popular, it is important to mark beliefs expressed by the two plays as a "feature" of the times I can do it. However, the ideas discussed in the two plays are not only found in these two works. Other works of that time also show the same conclusion. To mention a few examples, Pier Plowman, Sir Gawain, The Canterbury Tales contain some of the aforementioned "medieval views". History, property, ownership, and state of the world all exist in many works of this era, each work reconfirms other works.