The Gospel in Dostoyevsky: Selections from His Works
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Dostoyevsky's deepest, most compelling passages in one volume
The Gospel in Dostoyevsky vividly reveals – as none of his novels can on their own – the common thread of the great God-haunted Russian’s questioning faith. Drawn from The Brothers Karamazov, The Idiot, Crime and Punishment, and The Adolescent, the seventeen selections are each prefaced by an explanatory note. Newcomers will find in these pages a rich, accessible sampling. Dostoyevsky devotees will be pleased to find some of the writer’s deepest, most compelling passages in one volume. Full-page woodcuts by master engraver Fritz Eichenberg enhance the book.
Fyodor Dostoevsky
Fyodor Dostoyevsky (1821-81) was a Russian writer of novels, short stories and essays. His most famous work includes Crime and Punishment, The Idiot and The Brothers Karamazov. He is considered to be one of Europe's major novelists.
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The Gospel in Dostoyevsky - Fyodor Dostoevsky
THE GOSPEL IN DOSTOYEVSKY
The Gospel in Dostoyevsky
Selections from His Works
Introduced by J.I. Packer, Malcolm Muggeridge, & Ernest Gordon
Illustrated by Fritz Eichenberg
PLOUGH PUBLISHING HOUSE
Published by Plough Publishing House
Walden, New York
Robertsbridge, England
Elsmore, Australia
www.plough.com
Copyright ©2014, 1988 by Plough Publishing House
All rights reserved.
PRINT ISBN: 978-0-87486-634-6
PDF ISBN: 978-0-87486-629-2
EPUB ISBN: 978-0-87486-627-8
MOBI ISBN: 978-0-87486-628-5
Essentially an English translation of Das Evangelium in Dostojewski, edited by Karl Nötzel (1870–1945) and published by the Eberhard Arnold-Verlag, Sannerz and Leipzig, 1927. Nötzel, a Russian-born German, was known for his German translations of Russian authors.
The English translations of Contance Garnett were revised and edited for this edition. The excerpt from The Adolescent (The Raw Youth) was translated by Andrew R. MacAndrew and reprinted by permission of Doubleday & Co. The illustrations are reprinted by courtesy of Fritz Eichenberg, Associated American Artists, The Heritage Club, and the Limited Editions Club. The cover and frontispiece Portrait of Dostoyevsky
is from a Fritz Eichenberg wood engraving 4 x 2¾ inches.
The editors wish to express gratitude for the essential help and advice received from Ernest Gordon, Philip Yancey, and C.J.G. Turner.
Contents
Foreword
Introduction
FAITH IN GOD
The Legend of the Grand Inquisitor from The Brothers Karamazov
REBELLION AGAINST GOD
Rebellion
The Devil from The Brothers Karamazov
The Failure of Christendom from The Idiot
ON THE WAY TO GOD
The Story of Marie
A Fool for Christ from The Idiot
The Awakening of Lazarus from Crime and Punishment
Hymn of the Men Underground from The Brothers Karamazov
Reprieve and Execution from The Idiot
The Onion from The Brothers Karamazov
The Last Judgment from Crime and Punishment
The Crucifixion from The Idiot
From the Life of the Elder Zossima
The Wedding at Cana from The Brothers Karamazov
LIFE IN GOD
Talks With an Old Friend of God from The Adolescent (The Raw Youth)
Conversations and Exhortations of Father Zossima from The Brothers Karamazov
Afterword
Fyodor Dostoyevsky, Biographical Sketch
DOSTOYEVSKY IS TO me both the greatest novelist, as such, and the greatest Christian storyteller, in particular, of all time. His plots and characters pinpoint the sublimity, perversity, meanness, and misery of fallen human adulthood in an archetypal way matched only by Aeschylus and Shakespeare, while his dramatic vision of God’s amazing grace and of the agonies, Christ’s and ours, that accompany salvation, has a range and depth that only Dante and Bunyan come anywhere near. Dostoyevsky’s immediate frame of reference is Eastern Orthodoxy and the cultural turmoil of nineteenth-century Russia, but his constant theme is the nightmare quality of unredeemed existence and the heartbreaking glory of the incarnation, whereby all human hurts came to find their place in the living and dying of Christ the risen Redeemer. In the passages selected here, a supersensitive giant of the imagination projects a uniquely poignant vision of the plight of man and the power of God. If it makes you weep and worship, you will be the better for it. If it does not, that will show that you have not yet seen what you are looking at, and you will be wise to read the book again.
Regent College, Vancouver
J. I. Packer
Foreword
LIKE SO MANY of my generation, I first read Dostoyevsky’s novel, Crime and Punishment, when I was very young. I read it like a thriller, with mounting excitement. Later, when I came to read Dostoyevsky’s other works, especially his great masterpiece, The Brothers Karamazov, I realized that he was not just a writer with a superlative gift for storytelling, but that he had a special insight into what life is about, into man’s relationship with his Creator, making him a prophetic voice looking into and illumining the future. I came to see that the essential theme of all his writing is good and evil, the two points round which the drama of our mortal existence is enacted.
Dostoyevsky was a God-possessed man if ever there was one, as is clear in everything he wrote and in every character he created. All his life he was questing for God, and found him only at the end of his days after passing through what he called the hell-fire of doubt.
Freedom to choose between good and evil he saw as the very essence of earthly existence. Accept suffering and be redeemed by it
– this was Dostoyevsky’s message to a world hurrying frenziedly in the opposite direction, seeking to abolish suffering and find happiness. Since Dostoyevsky’s time, the world has known much trouble and found little happiness, and so may be the better disposed to heed his words.
Dostoyevsky, who normally stayed as far away as possible from museums and art galleries, paid a special visit to the Museum of Art in Basel to see a painting, Christ Taken Down from the Cross,
by Hans Holbein the Younger. He had heard about this picture, and what he had heard had greatly impressed him. His wife Anna in her diary described Dostoyevsky’s reaction to seeing the original:
The painting overwhelmed Fyodor Mikhailovich, and he stopped in front of it as if stricken…On his agitated face was the sort of frightened expression I had often noted during the first moments of an epileptic seizure. I quietly took my husband’s arm, led him to another room and made him sit down on a bench, expecting him to have a seizure any minute. Fortunately, it didn’t come. Little by little Fyodor Mikhailovich calmed down, and when we were leaving he insisted on going to take another look at the painting that had made such an impression on him.
Anna’s own reaction was one of revulsion. She writes of the painting that, contrary to tradition, Christ is depicted with an emaciated body, the bones and ribs showing, the hands and feet pierced by wounds, swollen and very blue, as in a corpse that is beginning to rot. The face is agonized, and the eyes are half open, but unseeing and expressionless. The nose, mouth, and chin have turned blue.
The reason that Anna was so horrified was that Holbein’s picture shows the body of Christ in a state of decomposition. On the other hand, as far as Dostoyevsky was concerned, the picture’s fascination was precisely that it did show Christ’s body decomposing. If his body was not subject to decay like other bodies, then the sacrifice on the cross was quite meaningless; Christ had to be a man like other men in order to die for men. In other words, at the incarnation, God did truly become a man.
Dostoyevsky was a truly prophetic figure, plunging down frenziedly into his kingdom of hell on earth and arriving at Golgotha. He had a tremendous insight into the future and foresaw the world we have today. He also proclaimed the coming of a universal brotherhood brought about, not by socialism and revolution, but by the full and perfect realization of Christian enlightenment.
In the serener circumstances of his last years, Dostoyevsky’s essential love of life and joy in all God’s creation found a surer expression than ever before. Beauty,
he makes Dmitri Karamazov say, is not only a terrible thing, it is also a mysterious thing. There God and the devil strive for mastery, and the battleground is the heart of men.
I continue to marvel at the chance – if chance it was – whereby the works of one of the greatest Christian writers of modern times should have continued to circulate in the world’s first avowedly atheistic state – Dostoyevsky’s devastatingly penetrating exposition of sin and suffering and redemption. Supposing one were asked to name a book calculated to give an unbeliever today a clear notion of what Christianity is about, could one hope to do much better than The Brothers Karamazov?
Malcolm Muggeridge
Introduction
THIS BOOK OF EXCERPTS from the writing of Dostoyevsky begins, very rightly, with The Legend of the Grand Inquisitor,
from The Brothers Karamazov. This is the high point of the stories he incorporates into his novels and essays. They are similar to the parables told by Jesus. They provide the reader with a practical illustration of a universal truth that can be described in no other way. The Legend of the Grand Inquisitor
is a superb parable of human existence. It raises the great, or cursed, questions so characteristic of Dostoyevsky’s passion for the living gospel. Only in the light of the gospel is the complexity of human existence made understandable, purposeful, and hopeful. Without it there is no meaning to the daily round of human life.
One might expect the Legend to be narrated by a believer. It is not. It is a prose poem composed by Ivan, the Karamazov brother who is the rationalist and the man of the Euclidean mind.
He, like the believer, is passionately involved in the gospel but in terms of its rejection, because it does not conform to his logic or his demand for justice.
He cannot understand why the world is arranged as it is. The only logical thing left for him to do is to return his ticket to existence. But to whom is he to return it? And so I hasten to give back my entrance ticket, and if I am an honest man, I am bound to give it back as soon as possible. And that I am doing. It’s not God that I don’t accept, Alyosha, only I most respectfully return him the ticket.
Thus the idea of God is essential even for someone who is trying passionately to deny him.
Alyosha, the believing brother, understands this tormented position and classifies it as rebellion, the rebellion of the disbeliever, who must have justice.
If he cannot have it, then he has no recourse but to destroy himself. In analyzing his brother’s position Alyosha is describing man after the fall, man in rebellion against God, man seeking to be as God. Thus sin is not passive but active; not simply a failure to obey God’s command, but a deliberate refusal to obey; indeed, an act of defiance.
Ivan, in telling The Legend of the Grand Inquisitor,
is thus telling his own story. He rebels against God’s ordering of creation and denies the effectiveness of Christ’s redemption. His Euclidean mind rejects the reality of God, man, and nature because it does not measure up to his formula of justice. Although he agonizes over the suffering of innocent children, he does so nevertheless, not from his love of them, but rather from his idea of its injustice. He confesses, I never could understand how one can love one’s neighbors. It’s just one’s neighbors, to my mind, that one can’t love, though one might love people at a distance.
One can love one’s neighbors in the abstract
(page 24). Such is the position of the Grand Inquisitor. For love of humanity he has assumed the burden of its freedom, a freedom too great for the people to bear. In assuming this burden he has chosen the way of the three temptations, which Jesus rejected for the sake of freedom. Thus he tells Jesus, At last we have completed that work in thy name…Today people are more persuaded than ever that they have perfect freedom, yet they have brought their freedom to us and laid it humbly at our feet
(page 6).
The freedom to which the Grand Inquisitor refers is the freedom of illusion. At best it is an idea and no more than that. Thus he believes himself to be justified in giving the masses bread in exchange for their soul. The mystery of his ideology replaces the divine mystery. By means of it the people assume that the bondage enforced by the sword of Caesar
is indeed the freedom they seek.
The tragic irony of Ivan’s situation is thus reflected in the image of the Grand Inquisitor. Both of them understand the mystery of the gospel as the mystery of divine/human freedom, yet they cannot accept it. They are in bondage. In rejecting the deliverance offered to them in the God-man they have chosen to be the man-God; the man who rules the Tower of Babel, or any tyranny in any time and in any place. It is on this note that the Legend ends. Jesus, whom the Grand Inquisitor has condemned, kisses his bloodless, aged lips.
The kiss glows in his heart, but the old man adheres to his idea
(page 19). For the sake of his idea he condemns Jesus who is the Word become flesh. The passion of his Euclidean thinking leaves him with no alternative.
Dostoyevsky raises the question about the gospel: What is it? The answer is that it is the good news of our deliverance. St. Paul’s great affirmation in Galatians 5:1 is the triumphant note of freedom achieved for us in and by Christ, For freedom Christ set us free.
This is not just an idea invented by scholars. It is the costly action of God in his freedom. This freedom has awful consequences. We have the freedom to defy the living God who has created us. What we term the Fall is an act of freedom. It is a negative freedom, however; it is that of rebellion. This is our condition without God – rebels who are driven by pride to assume what they imagine to be the power of God over others. We claim the freedom to sin, but we are unwilling to assume its consequences. We turn to Satan for justification, as the Grand Inquisitor (or Ivan) did. He is their invention as the justifier of their rebellion. These are the Grand Inquisitor’s words: The wise and dread spirit, the spirit of self-destruction and nonexistence, the great spirit talked with thee [Jesus] in the wilderness.
For both him and Ivan the miracle is not our Lord’s rejection of the three temptations, but their own invention and preservation of them. They are the whole future history of the world and of humanity
(page 7). They represent the choice of human pride, the original sin.
Although humankind has chosen to rebel against God, God has not rebelled against it and all its members. His love will not let them go. Makar presents this truth, I’d be frightened to meet a truly godless man…I’ve never really met a man like that. What I have met were restless men, for that’s what they should really be called…They come from all classes, even the lowest…but it’s all restlessness
(page 209). This restlessness describes the situation of all who were called to be pilgrims on the way to the eternal city but have lost their way because they have lost sight of their destination. They have, therefore, given away their inheritance and lost their destiny, like the Prodigal Son. God, however, is there! He has made us for himself!
Dostoyevsky seems to be indicating that man without God is nothing. The background for his writing is that of nineteenth century secularism. The Enlightenment had surpassed the Reformation to affirm as truth the idea of a godless cosmos, in which the state is supreme and its subjects have lost the dignity of the divine image. Erich Fromm was correct in stating that the intellectuals got rid of God in the eighteenth century and of man in the nineteenth. Dostoyevsky reminds us, however, that God and man cannot be destroyed by this idea. Perhaps two of the darkest rebels are the old father Karamazov, who represents the collective sin of Russia, and Stavrogin in The Possessed, who is the second generation rebel and revolutionary. Like Lenin and his successors, Stavrogin had come to the position of assuming that without God all things – such as terrorism and murder – are permissible. The elder Zossima describes such a condition as hell; he reflects upon the question, What is hell?
and answers it by replying that it is the suffering of being unable to love
(page 234). Such is the awful consequence of the freedom granted to us to negate God, and with him our origin and destiny.
Creative freedom, on the other hand, is an act of grace. The gospel bears witness to the only One who was and is truly free. Like the pious people of the peasantry, Dostoyevsky saw the humiliation of God in Jesus, as it is described by St. Paul in Philippians 2:5–11, as the essence of the gospel. This humiliation as the essence of the gospel is, however, a phase of the divine exaltation in which we are included. In this respect the teaching of Irenaeus in the second century ad had a great deal of influence upon the spiritual life of the Russian Orthodox Church. His teaching is more timely than ever: namely, God became man that man might become one with God.
In Crime and Punishment Dostoyevsky tells the story of Raskolnikov, who believes himself to be liberated from the old morality of Christian culture to the extent that he is free to murder a woman whom he presumes to be a useless member of society. His crime appears to be without purpose and without passion. He is one of those who prides himself upon his inability to love. Yet it is by the love of Sonia, a Russian version of Mary Magdalene, that he is claimed by grace. He sees in her a sort of insatiable compassion
which leads him to his first act of repentance (page 105). While still trying to believe in his freedom from God he turns to her, bends down, drops to the ground, and kisses her foot (page 110). This irrational act adds to his confusion to the extent that he tries to dismiss her as a religious maniac.
Nevertheless, he asks her to read the miracle of the raising of Lazarus. This she does. In doing so she reads it in such a way that her reading of it is her great confession: Yea, Lord: I believe that thou art the Christ, the son of God which should come into the world
(page 119). By her faith the power of grace that brought Lazarus from the corruption of the grave is repeated in the experience of Raskolnikov. He has the assurance that by this grace he will be forgiven at the Last Judgment. He is thus liberated from the bondage of sin, guilt, and fear.
As Sonia, the humiliated woman, is the agent of Raskolnikov’s redemption, so the humiliated people of Russia will be the agent of its deliverance from the consequences of the sin of the nineteenth century intellectuals. This is a prophecy that may well be in the process of being fulfilled at the moment. But God will save Russia as he has saved her many times. Salvation will come from the people, from their faith and their meekness
(page 223). It is those who share in the fellowship of suffering that share in the liberating action of the living God. The eyes of their faith are opened by grace so that they behold the mystery of God revealed in Christ’s agony on the cross. They understand, as the intellectuals cannot, that their salvation is beyond rational knowledge. It is of faith, for faith is our response to God’s revelation in Christ.
At this point it may be well to think about Dostoyevskv’s free characters. Three in particular are:
1. The underground man – or the equivalent of the ant who lives under the floorboards – is the man who dares to be free no matter how irrational such a claim may be. Despite the rational structuring of society and the attempted abolition of human freedom, he refuses to be a stop in the organ that can be pulled and pressed at the command of some superorganist. He is free to be absurd and to defy the system.
2. Prince Myshkin of The Idiot is the aristocrat who disregards the position granted to him by birth and wealth in order to take his place among the people in his freedom to be a fool in the eyes of his peers for Christ’s sake. His identity is with the humiliated Christ, and as such he is called upon to engage in his acts of deliverance. In his love for Nastasya Filippovna he is moved to bring – or at least to make the attempt to bring – Christ’s salvation to her, mad though she may be. In doing so he is reflecting the image of Christ – thus incurring the wrath of his critics who abuse and despise him and yet inwardly love him, even as the repentant rebel on the cross turned to Jesus beseeching deliverance. In describing the witness of the Prince, Dostoyevsky seems to be drawing upon the image of the suffering Messiah of Isaiah 52:13 – 53:12, which in turn is similar to the great kenotic passage in Philippians 2; Prince Myshkin thus is free to suffer. This is the cross he has accepted.
3. Alyosha is the pilgrim, and disciple, who learns that by repentance we participate in the benefits of Christ’s deliverance and are thus set free to love and to be responsible. Like Raskolnikov he is captured by grace. It is not his doing nor even of his seeking. Salvation is a happening beyond the control of church or state. It is an ecstasy of response to the wind of God that blows where it wills.
The miracle of grace in Alyosha’s life is related to Christ’s first miracle at the wedding feast at Cana of Galilee. By the narration of this miracle Alyosha becomes aware that Christ visits people in their gladness to intensify their joy. Again, it is the humiliated who possess the gladness to respond ecstatically to the joy of Christ.
It is the elder Zossima, who in reflecting the grace of Jesus, leads Alyosha into his presence. By him he was called to participate in the joy of the celebration. Thus, in his dream, he perceives that the dead elder Zossima is alive in the power of the resurrection. It is to this life eternal that he is invited as the elder Zossima takes him by the hand to raise him from his knees. As he rises he hears the staretz say, We are drinking the new wine, the wine of new, great gladness
(page 194).
Suddenly the mystery is revealed. His soul is filled to overflowing with rapture. In his ecstasy he throws himself down