Saturday, October 12, 2019
Christianity in Crime and Punishment :: Crime Punishment Essays
Christianity inà   Crime and Punishment     à       à  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã   Fyodor Dostoyevsky  wrote, " If someone succeded in proving to me that     Christ was outside the truth, and if, indeed, the truth was outside Christ,  then     I would sooner remain with Christ than with the truth" (Frank 68). It was by  no     means easy for Dostoyevsky to reach this conclusion. In Dostoyevsky's life,  one     sees that of an intellectual Prodigal Son, returning to the Father In  Heaven     only after all other available systems of belief have been exhausted. Reared  in     a devout Russian Orthodox home, Dostoyevsky as a young man rebelled against  his     upbringing and embraced the anarchist (and atheistic) philosophies of the     intelligentsia, radical students and middle class intellectuals violently     opposed to the status quo in Nineteenth-Century Russia (Morsm 50).  Dostoyevsky     revolutionary stirrings were not unnoticed by the Tsar's secret police, and,  in     1849, Dostoyevsky was sentenced to a mock execution followed by ten years'  hard     labor in a Siberian prison (Morsm 50).     à       à  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã   One critic said "It has been  customary to say that Dostoyevsky re-learnt     Christianity in prison." (A Boyce Gibson 19.) There, out of his element  and     surrounded by hardened criminals, he had plenty of time to contemplate life  and     read The New Testament (the only book he was allowed). However, it was not  until     his compulsory army service that Dostoyevsky's faith began to blossom. In  the     army, Dostoyevsky met a fellow officer and devout Christian named Baron  von     Vrangel, who befriended the still young Dostoevesky and helped him  re-discover     the Christian faith (Frank 4).     à       à  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã   Although a professing Christian  for the rest of his life, Dostoyevsky     was not a "plaster saint." (Until he died, he was plagued by doubts and a     passion for gambling.) Instead, Dostoyevsky understood, perhaps better than  any     other great Christian author, that his faith was created and sustained by  one     thing only: the grace of God.     à       à  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã   It is of such grace that  Dostoyevsky writes in Crime and Punishment.     Although most critics agree that Crime and Punishment's theme is not as     deliberately Christian as Dostoyevsky's latter works, the novel's voice is  still     authentically Christian. Written in 1864, shortly after Dostoyevsky lost  his     first wife, his brother, and a close friend (Gibson 32); Crime and  Punishment     					    
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