Father Alexis (distant disciple of Abbot Spiridion and teacher to Angel) worked to strike a balance between religon and science. He saw the good in both: love in religion, freedom in science; and the evil in the over-indulgence of both: mental atrophy in religion, lack of compassion in science. His goal was to move through the world with a philosopher's wisdom and a child's confidence,
I wondered what good there was in loving an insensitive God who leaves man with a desire for heaven in order to make him feel all the horror of his captivity
Lost in his pursuit of Truth, Father Alexis isolated himself. Lost in isolation, he found philosophy. Lost in philosophy, he found boredom which he called, "the worst fatigue of all." Lost in boredom, he found presence. Lost in presence, he found charity. Lost in charity, he found hope. Lost in hope, he searched for purpose. Lost in purpose, he found true immortality: our ideas, feelings, works, merits and sufferings.
your brain…is like a book unaware that it carries life within itself. This is how, for thirty years, I made a parchment of my own intelligence.
With an understanding of immortality in hand, Father Alexis looked to rebuild his world by passing on what he had learned to his student, named Angel, and in doing so Alexis found his calling:
ALEXIS: As Plato was the successor of the other enlighteners whom we revere, and whose disciples we are.
ANGEL: But what is our mandate then?
ALEXIS: It’s to have come after them.
Filling our present days with study, meditation and a continual striving toward perfection…we will succeed…the goal of life is to transmit life.
Alexis went from thinking his goal was to be completed in his lifetime, to realizing his lifetime was a part of a bigger goal. If, in this book, Donatien symbolized corruption and Abbot Spiridion symbolized hope, then we are all on the hero's journey as told by Father Alexis.
I love characters that reveal how authors see the best of this world; as Dostoevsky did with Zosima, Kafka with Joseph K's chaplain, DFW with Mario Incandenza, Cervantes with Don Quixote, and George Sand with Father Alexis.
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Alexis’ Truth (as told by Angel):
He said, firstly, that the grandeur and beauty of the universe accessible to the calculations and observations of human knowledge, showed us, in the Creator, order, wisdom and omnipotent knowledge;
Secondly, that the need which men feel, in society and among themselves, to form and establish relationships based on sympathy, on common religion and mutual protection, proved the spirit of sovereign justice in the universal lawmaker;
Thirdly, that the continual surges of man’s heart toward the ideal proved the infinite love of the father for men, washing in great waves over the great human family, and manifested individually in each soul in the sanctuary of its conscience.
From that he concluded three types of duties for man.
The first applied to the external nature: the duty to educate himself in the sciences so as to modify and perfect the physical world around him.
The second applied to his life in society: the duty to respect or establish institutions freely accepted by the human family and favorable to its development.
The third can be applied to the individual’s inner life: the duty to perfect himself with divine perfection in mind, and, for himself and for others, to unceasingly search for paths of truth, wisdom and virtue.
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(Bacco lives!)