Please check this paraph

We know that every man commits sins. There is no way that we can Undo our mistakes. It is only possible through the salvation . God likes those people who seeks His mighty forgivenss after committing sins, He don’t like those who stick to their mistakes. In the poetry of Micelangelo Buonaroti , salvation and sense of shame and sin are the basic element of his poems.Through his poems, he talkes about salvation and rebirth and focused that every man born with pure state “as a noble and perfect thing”, (1910) but his purity could not keep last long. Snse of guilt make him to be pure from his sins.



Michelangeko‘s poems also tell us that evil of the world mislead the human and God is only ony One who can save us fron the evil spirts. He emphasis that he can find God’s mercy by his good deeds, because we will be judged by our acts and virtue to God. Like he said, “I search for salvation Between virtue and vice.”( 1910) .

I'm not sure where to begin.

First please go through both paragraphs and make sure all singular subjects have singular verbs and all plural subjects have plural verbs.

For example, in this -- He don’t like -- you have written a singular subject but given it a plural verb. It would be He doesn't...

http://www.englishclub.com/grammar/terms.htm
Scroll down and read about agreement here.

avoiding predicate subject mismatching how to correct this sentence Measles is where a viral infection causes skin eruptions.

avoiding predicate subject mismatching how to correct this sentence Measles is where a viral infection causes skin eruptions.

The measles is a viral infection that causes skin eruptions.

Measles is where a viral infection causes skin eruptions.

my mom said her greatest achievement was when she had me.

The paraphrase you provided seems to capture the main idea of the original text. It talks about the concept of sin and salvation, highlighting the belief that every person commits sins and that salvation is the only way to undo those mistakes. The mention of God's forgiveness and preference for those who seek it after committing sins is also included.

The paraphrase then discusses the poetry of Michelangelo Buonaroti, where the themes of salvation, shame, sin, and rebirth are central. It mentions that every individual is born pure but cannot maintain that purity for long due to a sense of guilt. The idea that the evil of the world misleads humans and that only God can save them from evil spirits is also touched upon. It emphasizes the importance of good deeds as a means to earn God's mercy and the belief that individuals will be judged by their actions and virtues.

In summary, the paraphrase captures the core ideas of the original text regarding sin, salvation, God's forgiveness, and the themes explored in Michelangelo's poetry.