Search results for: “Dostoevsky “
-
The Madness of Democracy – A Spiritual Disease
Read more: The Madness of Democracy – A Spiritual DiseaseDostoevsky’s The Demons tells the story of a revolution within the context of a small village and a handful of personalities. The strange mix of philosophy and neurosis, crowd psychology and fashionable disdain for tradition all come together in the madness of a bloodbath. It is a 19th century Helter Skelter that presciently predicted the century to come. Our own […]
-
Forgive Everyone for Everything
Read more: Forgive Everyone for EverythingIn Dostoevsky’s great last work, The Brothers Karamazov, the story is told of Markel, brother of the Elder Zossima. Diagnosed with tuberculosis, he is dying. In those last days he came to a renewed faith in God and a truly profound understanding of forgiveness. In a conversation with his mother she wonders how he can […]
-
A Single Moment
Read more: A Single MomentGrushenka, a character in Dostoevsky’s The Brothers Karamazov, relates a now-famous fable about an old woman: Once upon a time there was a woman, and she was wicked as wicked could be, and she died. And not one good deed was left behind her. The devils took her and threw her into the lake of […]
-
The Mother of Us All
Read more: The Mother of Us AllA young friend recently lost his mother. It has been an occasion of reflection for me, thinking about the emptiness created by such a loss. Despite all of the confusion and conundrums in our contemporary culture surrounding gender issues – they only serve to underscore the fact that male-and-female, on the most fundamental level […]
-
How Powerless Are You Willing to Be?
Read more: How Powerless Are You Willing to Be?“My spiritual efforts don’t do anything, they merely bring me to the place where I know I can’t do anything, to the place where I am utterly naked before God!” -Fr. Silviu Bunta Sometimes I run across a quote that strikes my heart so deeply that I’m surprised it wasn’t me who said it. The […]
-
Judgment and Apocalypse – The Tale of Two Parables
Read more: Judgment and Apocalypse – The Tale of Two Parables“He came to himself.” These words form the turning point in the story of the Prodigal Son. They are words of judgment, apocalypse, and revelation. When the younger son demanded his inheritance from his father, he was not himself. When he traveled to a far land and wasted everything in wild pleasure, he was not […]
-
Modernity and the Temptations of Christ
Read more: Modernity and the Temptations of ChristIf I have done modernity a disservice, it might be in giving the impression that its temptations might be something new. In truth, there is nothing particularly new in the philosophy of modernity other than its peculiar assembly of old ideas and the capture of the general culture as its servant. It is worth considering […]
-
Food for the Soul
Read more: Food for the SoulSome years back, I sat in on a meeting between my bishop and a young man looking to attend seminary. After getting the bishop’s approval, he asked a wise question: “What should I be reading to prepare?” I was as interested in the answer as he was. “Read good literature,” was the answer. This advice […]
-
Forgiveness – Give an Enemy a Cup of Cold Water
Read more: Forgiveness – Give an Enemy a Cup of Cold WaterThere is a story related in Dostoevsky’s The Brothers Karamazov about an old woman who was quite wicked. She dies and goes to hell to the great distress of her guardian angel. The angel searches for any possible good deed to plead on her behalf and finds a rotten onion – something the old woman […]
Wishing everyone a great Resurrection. It is so sad to see so many faces in church only on Holy Friday…