Author Topic: Alexander Solzhenitsyn: The Courage to be a Christian  (Read 478 times)

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Offline TomSea

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Alexander Solzhenitsyn: The Courage to be a Christian
« on: November 16, 2016, 03:03:27 pm »
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Alexander Solzhenitsyn: The Courage to be a Christian

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Serving in the Soviet army on the Eastern Front during the Second World War he witnessed cold-blooded murder and the raping of women and children as the Red Army took its “revenge” on the Germans. Disillusioned, he committed the indiscretion of criticizing the Soviet leader Josef Stalin and was imprisoned for eight years as a political dissident. While in prison, he resolved to expose the horrors of the Soviet system. Shortly after his release, during a period of compulsory exile in Kazakhstan, he was diagnosed with a malignant cancer in its advanced stages and was not expected to live. In the face of what appeared to be impending death, he converted to Christianity and was astonished by what he considered to be a miraculous recovery.

Throughout the 1960s, Solzhenitsyn published three novels exposing the secularist tyranny of the Soviet Union and received the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1970. Following the publication in 1973 of his seminal work, The Gulag Archipelago, an exposé of the treatment of political dissidents in the Soviet prison system, he was arrested and expelled from the Soviet Union, thereafter living the life of an exile in Switzerland and the United States. He finally returned to Russia in 1994, after the collapse of the Soviet system.

In 1978, Solzhenitsyn caused great controversy when he criticized the secularism and hedonism of the West in his famous commencement address at Harvard University. Condemning the nations of the so-called free West for being morally bankrupt, he urged that it was time “to defend not so much human rights as human obligations.” The emphasis on rights instead of responsibilities was leading to “the abyss of human decadence” and to the committing of “moral violence against young people, such as motion pictures full of pornography, crime, and horror.” At the root of the modern malaise was the modern philosophy of “rationalistic humanism or humanistic autonomy,” which declared the “autonomy of man from any higher authority above him.” Such a view “could also be called anthropocentricity, with man seen as the centre of all.”

Read More At: http://www.theimaginativeconservative.org/2016/10/alexander-solzhenitsynthe-courage-to-be-a-christian-joseph-pearce.html

Offline EC

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Re: Alexander Solzhenitsyn: The Courage to be a Christian
« Reply #1 on: November 16, 2016, 03:22:06 pm »
That commencement address was one of the keys to developing my philosophy.
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Offline EasyAce

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Re: Alexander Solzhenitsyn: The Courage to be a Christian
« Reply #2 on: November 16, 2016, 05:14:51 pm »
It seems that in contemporary times having faith in God at all---whether you approach Him as a Jew,
a Christian, whichever approach you take---requires courage. When Solzhenitsyn said in that
commencement address, "Men have forgotten God, that's why all this has happened," he really
ran the temperatures up the scale.


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