Flannario Connor once pointed out that all good stories were converted (Wood, 217), and Wise Blood is no exception. The central spiritual struggle of this book is the role of hazel moat. The hero did it not only once but also did some transformations in the whole book. His spiritual pursuit is that he realized the pursuit of a new church and Jesus without Jesus. As can be seen from the analysis of this article, the spiritual arc of hazel is criticism of the way God knows. Such an initial way, nihilism is to believe anything.
Flannario Connor's 1952 novel 'Blood of Wisdom' is a grotesque cartoon story of Hazel Mortis who began his own church with distorted spiritual pursuit: a church without Jesus Christ. This novel contains various characters such as missionaries of artists, mummies to shrink, gorillas, and other inappropriate characters. This plot includes illegal sex, self-whipping and murder scenes. But it is also a miraculous and mysterious novel about God's grace. Because after Hazl Mortis finally received redemption after strongly denying Jesus and discovering sin about almost all novels.
According to Muller, "Hazel Motes in Wise Blood" is an example of a grotesque hero of Flannery O'Connor (28). Muller says that Hazel Motes are incredibly strange influences. When creating Hazel Motes, I think that Flannery O'Connor completed a grotesque hero. Hazel is a fanatic. His nature is contrary to grace. Jesus's obsession with him reached an abnormal level. Hazel desperately tried to deny his fundamentalist background
Hazelmorts denied that religion is as strong as people accepted in the 1950s. M. J. Fitzgerald pointed out that "the mystery of the sacrious impulse ... and the destructive nature of this impulse in extreme cases" is the basis of the blood of wisdom in "Guide to American literature." The violence of Morris shows extremism, and Americans in the 1950s blindly seem to adopt religion. O'Connor combines the parallelism between novels and real life with the image of people lacking a rich society's image and spiritual goals.
Enoch Emery met Hazelmorts in town on the second night of Moots. He became Mottes' most loyal supporters, reminding Moses for the new Jesus. A welfare woman who believes in "old" Jesus took Ameri away from her father's care at the age of 12. Then the woman sent him to the Bible school, and if he did not imprison him as she asks, he lives in prison. After successfully escaping a woman, Emery wanted nothing to do with "the good of Jesus."