Fyodor
was a wild young man. His life revolved around eating, drinking,
talking, music, theatre and the company of women. He dreamt of fame. He
was caught up in a movement for political and social reform in Russia
during the repressive reign of Tsar Nicholas I. He was arrested, tried
and condemned initially to be executed.
On
a bitterly cold morning, the prisoners were taken out to be shot. The
prison guards raised their muskets to their shoulders and took aim. At
the last moment, a white flag was raised to announce that the Tsar had
commuted their sentence to life imprisonment in Siberia.
On
his arrival in Siberia on Christmas Eve 1849, at the age of
twenty-eight, two women slipped him a New Testament. When the guard
turned away momentarily, they suggested he should search the pages
thoroughly. He did.
While
in prison, Fyodor Dostoyevsky, the great Russian novelist, read the New
Testament from cover to cover and learnt much of it by heart. He wrote,
‘I believe that there is no one lovelier, deeper, more sympathetic and
more perfect than Jesus. I say to myself with jealous love not only is
there no one else like him, but there never could be anyone like him.’
It was through the Bible that he had encountered Jesus Christ.
The apostle Paul describes all Scripture as ‘God-breathed’
(2 Timothy 3:16). The Bible is not just inspired in the way that
artists, poets, composers and musical performers can be said to be
inspired. It actually has God’s breath, his Spirit, in it. The Bible is
one of the main ways in which God speaks to us.
Blessings,
Roxanna