Sean Berube Profile picture
May 27 17 tweets 6 min read Read on X
Hamlet is the greatest play of all time

It also asks one of the most disturbing questions in all of literature

Not, “To be or not to be?”

But a simpler 2-word question:

It drove Hamlet insane, and still haunts readers to this day…🧵 Image
The central question of Hamlet is the opening line:

“Who’s there?”

On the surface it's a simple question - a guard asks it as a stranger approaches

But there's far more to this question than meets the eye:

It hauntingly lingers throughout the entire play Image
As a plot recap, Hamlet is visited by the ghost of his Father, who reveals:

“My brother murdered me. Avenge me!”

Hamlet then swears a dreadful vow:

“From the table of my memory

I'll wipe away all trivial fond records…

And thy commandment all alone shall live” Image
Hamlet promises to erase all morality except vengeance

However, this vow sends him into a deep turmoil of paranoia, cynicism, and insanity

By act 3, he loses his will to live:

“To be or not to be? That is the question”

Why does he despair? It goes back to the opening line Image
“Who’s there?” is not just a guard’s question

It’s a question Hamlet keeps asking as he debates whether or not to avenge his Father

It’s the very question that leads to his spiritual collapse Image
Hamlet first asks “Who’s there?” when the ghost appears:

He wonders if its a real ghost, or a vision, or a demon

Here, Hamlet begins doubting his senses

But his uncertainty doesn’t stop there Image
After hearing of the murder, Hamlet starts asking “Who’s there?” to his community

His uncle, his mother, and the court of Denmark:

“Are you all who you claim to be? Or are your liars and murderers?”

Unhealthy paranoia begins to rot his soul Image
Next, Hamlet asks “who’s there?” to himself:

He wonders if he’s insane, or a coward, or both

His skepticism isolates him. He becomes a stranger in his own body

Finally, Hamlet turns his doubt to Heaven itself: Image
“To be or not to be? That is the question?”

Hamlet becomes suicidal

He doubts whether life itself is even good:

“Who’s there… Are you there, God?”

Hamlet, doubtful of reality, can no longer bear existence itself Image
This is the point:

Hamlet’s vow to murder Claudius destroyed his moral foundation

Without morality, he cannot know good from evil, nor truth from lies

And without that, he cannot know anyone. Not even himself Image
"Who’s there?" Is a cry of existential dread

Without truth, Hamlet cannot know God, neighbor, or self

He loses all certainty, and his very will to live

This then, is why Hamlet is the “first modern man” Image
Modern man, like Hamlet, is plagued by doubt

He’s skeptical of truth, morality, and even his own identity

So Hamlet’s despair is a warning:

Abandon truth and morality, and life becomes unbearable

However, Hamlet’s doubt points to a solution too: Image
“Who’s there?” teaches us that relationship is the root of reality

Hamlet's misery came from his isolation:

Becoming a stranger to God, man, and self

But man was made for relationship, and relationship is perfected by love Image
To love is to will the Good of God and neighbor

When you seek to know and love God and others, you begin to know yourself

The answer to “who’s there?” becomes clear:

“I am who am” Image
So to live well is to love well:

To know God and neighbor, and will the Good towards them, is to know yourself

Destiny then, is not asking "who's there?"

It's answering "who's there?" through a constant, charitable love that desires Goodness for all Image
If you want to go even deeper into Hamlet, join me at the Athenaeum book club tonight at 8pm EST!

athenaeum-book-club.circle.so/join?invitatio…
Bonus:

I offer faith-based fitness coaching for Christian men looking to:

- Get fit
- Grow in their faith
- Learn the great books

If interested, DM me "fitness" to discuss!

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More from @SeanBerube4

May 26
Lord of the Rings has inspired 100s of millions

But what inspired Lord of the Rings?

Of all things, Tolkien’s genius was forged in the blood-soaked trenches of WWI

Here’s how Hell on Earth inspired the greatest fantasy story of all time…🧵 Image
Tolkien’s upbringing was brutal:

He was raised poor, and both his parents died by the time he was 12

He had a lonely adolescence too, raised in an orphanage

Only one joy sustained him during these early years Image
Tolkien found peace in language and literature

He escaped in fantasy stories, and even created his own myths and languages…

After persevering through school, he married his childhood sweetheart

It was a happy marriage, but the good times wouldn't last:

WWI was in swing Image
Read 20 tweets
May 21
80 years ago, CS Lewis made a grave prediction:

First, we’d stop believing the Devil exists

Then, we’d start celebrating him

Here’s what he warned, and why it’s coming true before our eyes…🧵 Image
CS Lewis made his warning in his scholarly work, “A Preface to Paradise Lost”

It analyzes John Milton’s epic poem “Paradise Lost”

The poem details Satan’s rebellion and the Fall of Man

It’s a masterpiece, but Lewis says modern readers are making a grave mistake Image
Satan is a central figure in the poem

He's bold, charismatic and intelligent

His slogan: “Better to reign in Hell than serve in Heaven”

The story reveals that pride is the root of all evil, in the Devil and Man

But here’s the problem: Image
Read 14 tweets
May 14
You know the 7 day Creation story — but do you know the pattern beneath it?

Augustine says Genesis points to a hidden design that ripples through all reality

Once you see it, you might just glimpse the face of God himself…🧵 Image
Augustine reads the creation story as a blueprint:

A map of the soul’s journey to God

Each day is a stage in the mind’s ascent to Truth and Enlightenment

But there’s a key point that many people miss:

You can see the Trinity in the first lines of scripture Image
“In the beginning, God created the Heavens and the Earth”

Here “God” is the Father, creator of all things

“Beginning” refers to Christ (In the beginning was the Word)

But where’s the Holy Spirit? Image
Read 16 tweets
May 13
Dostoevsky understood the Devil like no one else

He captured his evil in one of the most chilling scenes in all literature

Here’s what he wrote, and what it reveals about Satan and the “unforgivable sin…”🧵 Image
The devil appears in Dostoevsky’s novel Brothers Karamazov

To understand him, you have to understand his target — Ivan Karamazov:

Ivan is a coldhearted intellectual who hates God

But his unbelief isn’t your typical atheism Image
Ivan rejects God because of human suffering:

He says no God who lets children suffer could be good

Instead of having faith, Ivan is a humanist:

God isn’t real, and religion is a crutch

Morality is man made, and our only duty is to end suffering Image
Read 17 tweets
May 1
Ever wonder why Tolkien made Sauron an eye?

It’s no mere fantasy symbol — it points to a Satanic evil

Here’s what the Eye really means, and why Sauron’s evil is worse than you think…🧵 Image
Tolkien didn’t believe in absolute evil

But he said Sauron was as close as you could get to pure evil

To understand why, we have to look at his roots:

Sauron used to be good — an angel Image
Tolkien writes:

"At first Sauron served God

He loved order and coordination, and disliked all
confusion and wasteful friction"

Sauron loved to make harmony from design

Sadly, his love became obsessive. It led to… unnatural desires Image
Read 17 tweets
Apr 29
Dostoevsky demolished Karl Marx in a single paragraph

In just a few lines, he dismantled Communism — and exposed the evil at its rotten core

Here’s what Dostoevsky wrote, and how it put Marx and Communism to shame…🧵 Image
Image
First, let’s recap Marx’s communism:

He called for the poor to overthrow the rich and seize the means of production

Why?

Because it would (in theory) create a utopian society, free of suffering Image
At first glance, such a society might sound nice

Who wouldn’t want to create an equal society, free of suffering?

But Dostoevsky saw a grave danger in this dream

In “Notes from Underground,” he issues a prophetic warning against communist utopianism Image
Read 15 tweets

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