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The Al Mohler Crosswalk Commentary � 
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Thursday, August 26, 2004

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>>  An Uncaptive Mind at Rest

The recent death of poet Czeslaw Milosz robs the world of one of its
most prophetic and powerful voices. As one of the world's most famous
and celebrated men of literature, Milosz was a titan of poetry and
prose. Nevertheless, his moral vision and prophetic insights should be
of great interest even to those who are not readers of contemporary
poetry, for Czeslaw Milosz was one of the most honest men of our times.

Born June 30, 1911, to a Polish family living in Lithuania, Milosz
emerged into a world then framed by the Russian empire. Later, he would
experience firsthand the terrors of Nazi tyranny and Soviet
totalitarianism. His moral courage and his resistance to the
intellectual dangers of his day set Milosz apart from the Western
intellectuals who could no longer tell the difference between good and
evil.

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Trained as a lawyer, Milosz would serve as a Polish diplomat during the
early years of the Communist regime. Prior to that, he had resisted the
Nazis and their genocidal attacks upon the people of Warsaw,
particularly the Jews. As Milosz would later reflect, Warsaw became a
symbol of the inhumanity of twentieth century totalitarianism, with
spirits crushed first by the Germans and later by Soviet communism.

Even as a state functionary, Milosz began to write poetry as an
avocation. He was actively engaged with the Parisian intellectual class
in the years after World War II, when he served as a Polish attache in
the French capital. When he was warned of his likely arrest and
prosecution back in Poland, Milosz fled the Stalinist purges and
emigrated to the West.

Very quickly, Milosz discovered that the liberal intellectuals he met in
Western Europe had made themselves woefully blind to the true nature of
Communist totalitarianism.

In 1951, Milosz wrote The Captive Mind, one of the century's great
exposes of Communist tyranny. Milosz traced the problem directly to its
philosophical roots. "It was only toward the middle of the twentieth
century that the inhabitants of many European countries came, in general
unpleasantly, to the realization that their fate could be influenced
directly by intricate and abstruse books of philosophy," Milosz argued.
Communism triumphed because far too many people--including the
intellectual class--refused to believe that ideas really mattered. As
Milosz would note, "The average human being, even if he had once been
exposed to it, wrote philosophy off as utterly impractical and useless.
Therefore, the great intellectual work of the Marxists could easily pass
as just one more variation on a sterile pastime. Only a few individuals
understood the causes and probable consequences of this general
indifference."

Of course, the consequences of this indifference to ideas led eventually
to Communist oppression and Stalinist murder on a massive scale.

Milosz understood that Communism had now replaced Christianity as the
religion of a secular age. He rejected this "New Faith," lamenting the
fact that many intellectuals were attracted to it like moths drawn to a
candle. "In the end," he noted, "he throws himself into the flame for
the glory of mankind."

The eclipse of Christianity became one of the great themes of Milosz's
work. As a Polish Catholic, he observed the erosion of personal faith
and public witness as the substance of Christianity was evaporated, even
as the Communists hijacked religious fervor for their own ends. With
unique wisdom, Milosz saw that religion had itself "lost its hold on
men's minds not only in the people's democracies [Communist nations],
but elsewhere as well." Tracing this slide into secularism, Milosz
blamed it on a loss of theological commitment among the intellectuals.
"As long as a society's best minds were occupied by theological
questions, it was possible to speak of a given religion as the way of
thinking of the whole social organism. All the matters which most
actively concerned the people were referred to it and discussed in its
terms. But that belongs to a dying era."

Over a period of time, theology was replaced with a sterile philosophy
that sought to answer humanity's most fundamental questions, but in the
end could offer only repression and nihilism. Few intellectuals escaped
what Milosz described as the "captive mind," shaped by the totalitarian
ideology and deadened by the spiritual famine of the Communist
worldview. Milosz's exposure to the intellectual class in Western Europe
led him to believe that such persons were capable of massive
self-delusion. In subservience to their own form of Marxist ideology,
these intellectuals refused to see the obvious and were thus guilty of
both moral blindness and complicity with the great evils of twentieth
century totalitarianism. In 1960, Milosz left Paris and moved to the
United States, accepting a professorship in the Slavic Department at the
University of California at Berkeley.

In 1980, Milosz won the Nobel Prize for Literature. By that time, his
poetry had been translated into several languages and his work had
become celebrated throughout the free world. In accepting the Nobel
Prize, Milosz described himself as "a child of Europe," but wondered
openly if Europe could be salvaged out of its intellectual and spiritual
crises. A man of honest hope, Milosz told the Nobel committee of his
hope that "our time will be judged as a necessary phase of travail
before mankind ascends to a new awareness."

The greatness of Czeslaw Milosz is rooted not only in his great poetic
gift, but in his understanding of the fundamental importance of
worldview and his affirmation of the unity of truth and value.
Essentially, Milosz was a Christian writer who understood that once
Christianity's truth-claims had been stripped away, the foundation for
art, literature, and meaning had been eradicated.

With piercing insight, Milosz defined the twentieth century as "the
epoch of a sudden erosion of Christianity." Even as the Christian
worldview unified the good, the beautiful, and the true, the art and
literature of the twentieth century destroyed "the very foundations of
Christianity," Milosz argued. "They voice a permanent complaint against
existence which is pain and insufficiency, but instead of assigning an
exceptional, central place to man, they include him in the chain of
evolution, see in him a movement of atomic particles and chemical
processes, submit him to the determinism of genes, so that his
specificity utterly disappears." In other words, this new secularized
vision of humanism would destroy humanity itself.

Though he lived in hope, Milosz suffered few delusions about the reality
of his times. "The history of our species has been a series of cruelties
and crimes, yet humanity has never before known such crimes as those of
the twentieth century, both as to their quantity and quality."

In the face of the secular tide, some theologians and intellectuals
proposed a reduction of Christianity's truth claims--the very essence of
what Rudolf Bultmann was all about in his method of "demythologization."
With acid wit, Milosz observed that such efforts amounted to "the
selling off of religion's properties, in the hope it would be possible
to farm on a reduced area." The result of that will be the surrender of
Christianity itself.

Czeslaw Milosz died in his beloved Krakow on August 14. A spokesman for
the family told reporters that the cause of death had not yet been
determined. "It's death, simply death. It was his time--he was 93," was
the explanation.

Almost twenty years before his death, Milosz imagined a time when he was
no longer alive. His hope was to continue to speak through his writings.
"I imagine the earth when I am no more," he envisioned. "Yet the books
will be there on the shelves, well borne, derived from people, but also
from radiance, heights." Czeslaw Milosz's voice may now be stilled, but
his words continue to speak to a world that still needs to hear.


____________________________________

R. Albert Mohler, Jr. is president of The Southern Baptist Theological
Seminary in Louisville, Kentucky.  For more articles and resources by
Dr. Mohler, and for information on The Albert Mohler Program, a daily
national radio program broadcast on the Salem Radio Network, go to
www.albertmohler.com.  For information on The Southern Baptist
Theological Seminary, go to www.sbts.edu.  Send feedback to
[EMAIL PROTECTED]


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