In ordinary life, an encounter with God - a reading of revelation from the book Crime and Punishment, of Fyodor Dostoyevsky

Authors

  • James Wilson Januário de Oliveira
  • Wesclei Ribeiro da Cunha

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.23925/2177-952X.2013v7i12p89-%20101

Keywords:

Revelation, Ordinary-Extraordinary, Theology and Literature

Abstract

The objective of the present text is to develop a reflection about the value of human life in today’s society bringing into focus the contrasting perspectives of the ordinary and the extraordinary of life. For that purpose, we emphasize the conception of the Catholic Church from the Second Vatican Council that suggests an attitude of a Pilgrim Church which longs for dialogue with human beings in their ordinary life (we intend to rescue the positive sense of the term "ordinary"), in disadvantage of the triumphalist vision which gives priority to the great deeds of history. In that sense, we establish a dialogue with the literal work Crime and Punishment (1866) by Fyodor Dostoyevsky whose protagonist Raskolnikov reveals himself through the contemporary dilemma between being and not being extraordinary in the eyes of the society. His moral conscience is tested after a crime he committed. The apex of this revelation takes place after the reading of the Gospel relating to the resurrection of Lazarus shared with Sonia, a flagrant sinner, an ordinary in the eyes of the society represented in the work. In fact, how it happens in the painful passage of Raskolnikov, God makes himself known through the other in borderline situations and we take him into account through the experience which a man of faith realizes when discovering Him to be present. The presence of God in the world is surely not to be understood in the sphere of the extraordinary, what matters is the experience of refuge when we are seduced by the faith.

Author Biographies

James Wilson Januário de Oliveira

Wesclei Ribeiro da Cunha

Issue

Section

Articles