The Duality of the Second Coming: Between Sacred Hope and Literary Nightmare
In religious doctrine, the Second Coming is the "blessed hope" of the faithful. It is characterized by the sudden and powerful return of Christ "on the clouds of heaven" to separate the righteous from the wicked. For believers, this event is not a source of terror but of reassurance; it is the moment when suffering ends and God’s faithfulness is fully realized. The focus here is on restoration, where the "centre" of the universe is a moral and divine order that finally holds firm. Second Coming of Jesus Christ Second Coming
The phrase "the Second Coming" traditionally evokes a sense of ultimate justice and the culmination of divine history. In Christian theology, it represents the physical and visible return of Jesus Christ to Earth to bring final judgment and establish a kingdom of peace. However, in modern literature, specifically through the lens of W.B. Yeats’s 1919 poem, this same concept is transformed into a chilling vision of societal collapse and the birth of a "rough beast". By comparing these two perspectives, we see how the same prophetic language can be used to describe both a world being saved and a world falling apart. The Duality of the Second Coming: Between Sacred