New Releases by Malcolm Muggeridge

Malcolm Muggeridge is the author of A Fireside Chat with Malcolm Muggeridge (2013), Time and Eternity (2011), Conversion (2005), Seeing Through the Eye (2005), A Third Testament (2004).

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A Fireside Chat with Malcolm Muggeridge

A Fireside Chat with Malcolm Muggeridge
John Bosco is a favorite saint of all Catholic youth but especially of boys. A Story of St. John Bosco details the very interesting story about the life of John Bosco, a story that has had a great influence on Catholic youth the past 100 years.

Time and Eternity

release date: Jan 01, 2011
Time and Eternity
Muggeridge''s writing dazzles with its prophetic insight, courage and wit. He was the first writer to reveal the true nature of Stalin''s regime when in 1933 he exposed the terror famine in the Ukraine. Four decades later, Muggeridge was to make the work of Mother Teresa of Calcutta who contributed a Foreword to this book during the initial stages of its research known all over the world. This enthralling collection of Muggeridge''s journalism, reveals the astonishing range and steadiness of his gaze. Muggeridge seems to have been present at the great turning points of the last century and to have known, and seen through, the pretensions of many of its protagonists. Painstakingly researched from amongst Muggeridge''s private papers, journals, letters and unpublished works, Time and Eternity offers unique and inspirational insight into the professional and private journey of one of the great writers of our time.

Conversion

release date: Feb 18, 2005
Conversion
From the book: " What is a conversion? The question is like asking, ''What is falling in love?'' There is no standard procedure, no fixed time. No Damascus Road experience has been vouchsafed me; I have just stumbled on, like Bunyan''s Pilgrim, falling into the Slough of Despond, locked up in Doubting Castle, terrified at passing through the Valley of the Shadow of Death; from time to time, by God''s mercy, relieved of my burden of sin, but only, alas, soon to acquire it again." "From my earliest years, there was something going on inside me other than vague aspirations to make a name for myself and a stir in the world: something that led me to feel myself a stranger among strangers in a strange land, whose true habitat was elsewhere, another destiny whose realization would swallow up time into Eternity, transform flesh into spirit, knowledge into faith, and reveal in transcendental terms what our earthly life truly signifies." In November 1982, Malcolm Muggeridge was received into the Roman Catholic Church, an event which attracted much attention and curiosity. To Malcolm Muggeridge, it signified "a sense of homecoming, of picking up the threads of a lost life." Malcolm Muggeridge, well known around the world in the latter part of the twentieth century as a journalist, writer, and media figure, is still remembered as a vociferous unbeliever for a great part of his career. But always he had had an awareness that another dimension existed, that there was a destiny beyond the devices and desires of the ego, and that earthly life could not be the end. This book, first published in 1988 and the last of his writing to be published in his lifetime, is a personal statement of the history and development of his religious beliefs. An important section relates to Mother Teresa of Calcutta, latterly beatified, and with expectations to becoming a Saint. Her influence was perhaps the most powerful force leading this deeply thinking man to God and to the Roman Catholic Church. He describes also the effect upon him of meetings with Alexander Solzhenitsyn, a man whom he considers to be one of the greatest prophets of our time, with a profound spiritual message for our turbulent world. This moving testimony is not about the mechanics of becoming a Roman Catholic. Rather, it is about a series of happenings, occasions of enlightenment, that led one spiritually troubled man to find God. It is a statement of belief which will fascinate all who are interested in the workings of the human mind, and will inspire all who seek the Truth.

Seeing Through the Eye

release date: Jan 01, 2005
Seeing Through the Eye
"Malcolm Muggeridge was one of Great Britain''s mostwell-known journalists and television personalities, having interviewed practically every major public figure of his time. He shocked the world with his conversion to Christianity later in life. ""St. Mugg"", as he was affectionately known, was clear in his new-found faith: ""It is the truth that has died, not God,"" and ""Jesus was God or he was nothing."" These wonderful selections of Muggeridge''s writings and speeches cover a wide variety of spiritualthemes, revealing his profound faith, great wit, and lively writing style. Topics include ""Jesus: The Man Who Lives"", ""Is There a God?"", ""The Prospect of Death"", ""Do We NeedReligion?"", ""Peace and Power"", and many more. ""The counter-countercultural declaration of Mr. Muggeridge''sconversion was especially eye-catching given the great legions traveling in the opposite direction. His largerpublic knew him through his work as a television host and critic. But all of literate England, and much of America, knew him as a learned and incisive journalist who had written Winter in Moscow, a searing exposé of Communism. His intellect and historical savoir-faire gave hiscriticisms a very long reach. In America he made regular appearances as book editor of Esquire magazine. NoEnglishman has a more mordant, more attractive wit.""

A Third Testament

release date: Jan 01, 2004
A Third Testament
A Modern pilgrim explores the spiritual wanderings of Augustine, Blake, Pascal, Tolstoy, Bonhoeffer, Kierkegaard, and Dostoevsky. Based on an acclaimed TV series, this illuminating collection of portraits brings to life seven men in search of God, seven maverick thinkers whose spiritual wanderings make for unforgettable reading.

The Very Best of Malcolm Muggeridge

release date: Jan 01, 2003
The Very Best of Malcolm Muggeridge
Excerpts drawn from books, essays, journalism, broadcasts, scripts, diaries and letters, 1926-1986.

Christ and the Media

release date: Jan 01, 2003
Christ and the Media
"The media in general, and TV in particular, are incomparably the greatest single influence in our society . This influence is, in my opinion, largely exerted irresponsibly, arbitrarily, and without reference to any moral or intellectual, still less spiritual guidelines whatsoever." Throughout his journalistic career, Malcolm Muggeridge was a commentator. On radio and television, as a lecturer, journalist and author, he fascinated, delighted, provoked-and sometimes infuriated-his audiences. Christ and the Media is a sharp, witty critique of media-oriented culture with such intriguing fantasies as the "the Fourth Temptation," in which Jesus is approached with the offer of a worldwide TV network. "Future historians," wrote Muggeridge, "will surely see us as having created in the media a Frankenstein monster which no one knows how to control or direct, and marvel that we should have so meekly subjected ourselves to its destructive and often malign influence. Born in 1903 started his career as a university lecturer at the university in Cairo before taking up journalism. As a journalist he worked around the world on the Guardian, Calcutta Statesman, the Evening Standard and the Daily Telegraph, and then in 1953 became editor of Punch where he remained for four years. In later years he became best known as a broadcaster both on television and radio for the BBC. His other books include Jesus Rediscovered, Jesus: The Man Who Lives, and A Third Testament. He died in 1990.

Confessions of a Twentieth-century Pilgrim

release date: Jan 01, 1988
Confessions of a Twentieth-century Pilgrim
"The spiritual parallel to his highly praised memoir, Chronicles of Wasted Time, Malcolm Muggeridge''s ''confessions'' recount his journey to faith in an age of disbelief. From his reception into the Roman Catholic Church in 1982 back to his boyhood and his college days at Cambridge, from a teaching stint in Cairo to his career as a journalist in India, Russia, and Britain through the war years—Muggeridge highlights the events that served as epiphanies or moments of revelation. Throughout, he records his growing disillusionment with this century''s utopian dreams and the corresponding awakening of his own faith. The result is vintage Muggeridge: the prose is clear and lively; images and descriptions are accompanied by an acerbic wit, written in a tone alternately brash and self-deprecating." --

My Life in Pictures

release date: Jan 01, 1987

The End of Christendom

The End of Christendom
Discusses the downfall of world-dependent Christendom and the continuance of the everlasting kingdom of Jesus Christ. -- Back cover.

Things Past

Things Past
A collection of Muggeridge''s writings. Demonstrates that his preoccupation with might broadly be called "religious" questions is no recent quirk, but a theme running through all his writings.

A Twentieth Century Testimony

A Twentieth Century Testimony
A collection of the author''s thoughts about faith, God, and age.

Jesus, the Man who Lives

Jesus, the Man who Lives
For each successive generation the story of Jesus needs to be looked at afresh through contemporary eyes. Malcolm Muggeridge, a distinguished international journalist and sometime editor of Punch, a sharp-tongued social commentator and television controversialist, has come to have an intense and highly personal preoccupation with Jesus and his teaching. Though he is now a fervent believer in the unique truth and continuing relevance of Jesus, as revealed in the Gospels, in the stupendous drama of the Incarnation, Passion and Resurrection, he accepts no sectarian rules, and is sceptical about current attempts to make Christianity conform to today''s materialistic outlook and values. To look for Jesus in history, he insists, is as futile as supposing that his Kingdom can be realized through politics and advanced by the exercise of power. His concern is with the essential significance of Jesus''s birth, life, ministry, death and continuing presence in the world. At the same time, he relates the traditional Christianity, which has been handed down to us, to life as it is lived today, with all its dilemmas and controversies and conflicts. One process, to which every Christian testimony ministers; from the simplest and crudest to the most articulate and sophisticated, from the Apostle Paul and St Augustine to a Mother Teresa and a Dietrich Bonhoeffer in our own time; but still deriving from that dramatic intervention of God in history two thousand years ago. This is a book which will command attention, arouse debate, and yet give much food for thought among those who really want to get back to the fundamentals of the Christian faith, out of which our civilization was born, on which it has sustained itself and flourished, and lacking which, Mr Muggeridge considers, it will surely perish. Professor William Barclay writes of the book: ''It is a compulsive reading...I have no doubt at all that it is an act of witness, one man''s testimony to Jesus. I think that the dedication on the first page--"I write this book for love of your love"--from Augustine, does really characterize it. It is a book written from the heart, and I do not doubt that it will reach the heart.'' Illustrating Mr Muggeridge''s narrative and argument, the book reproduces a series of very relevant, and often quite unfamiliar, images of the life of Jesus, not merely from the works of great and original artists such as El Greco, Bruegel, Blake and Van Gogh, but also from early mosaics, ikons, medieval stained glass windows and church sculptures of great beauty. -Publisher

The Infernal Grove

The Infernal Grove
The author gives an account of his life from the early 1930s through World War II as a journalist and spy in Africa and Europe for the Allies.

Still I Believe: Nine Talks Broadcast During Lent and Holy Week 1969

Another King

Another King
The speaker asserts that people who try to make themselves happy in earthly terms are doomed to failure.

The Thirties

The Thirties
Covers the key events of the 1930s and paints a picture of that decade to bring its unique atmosphere to life. Includes events such as the financial crisis of 1931, Edward VIII''s abdication. the National Government under Ramsey McDonald and the Invergordon Mutiny. The decade is not protrayed as one of planned development but as a river in full spate.

The Most of Malcolm Muggeridge

The Most of Malcolm Muggeridge
England''s "bad boy" essayist and critic uses his wit and iconoclastic talents to deflate a number of sacred cows.
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