Sean Berube Profile picture
Aug 13 16 tweets 6 min read Read on X
The French Revolution was a bloody disaster

Mobs ruled, cities burned, and guillotines roared — how could anyone fight back against such horrors?

Charles Dickens had the answer, and wrote a book all about it:

Here’s his advice on how to stop a Reign of Terror… 🧵 Image
Charles Dickens writes on France’s Reign of Terror in his novel A Tale of Two Cities (spoilers)

Paris was wrought with revolutionary violence:

One false accusation could label you an “enemy of the revolution,” and send you to the guillotine

But what drove this hysteria? Image
The Reign of Terror was driven by wrath:

The “oppressed” were “eating the rich”

This spirit of wrath led to a perpetual cycle of violence:

Victims become oppressors, violence begets violence, bloodshed multiplies, heads begin to roll... Image
It would be easy to feel powerless in such a dystopia:

How can I resist a mass-murdering government?

The answer is not what you think

It doesn’t entail violence, politics, or even leadership

Instead, simply follow the example of the story’s hero - a drunken lawyer… Image
Sydney Carton is the ultimate cynic

He’s an alcoholic attorney who believes himself a failure and waste of life

Only a kind-hearted woman - Lucie Manette - brings him joy

His love for her awakens a long dormant heroism inside him Image
As the novel progresses, Sydney’s love for Lucie flourishes, and so does his humanity

He expresses a growing desire for redemption:

To commit himself to a noble ideal to make his “wasted” life meaningful… Image
His heroic moment comes at the novel’s conclusion

Lucie’s husband, Charles, is unjustly arrested in Paris - sentenced to death

Sydney, seeing a chance for redemption, plots the unthinkable:

Break into prison, free Charles, and take his place under the guillotine Image
It’s a heartbreaking sacrifice, but Sydney affirms it’s necessary:

"It is a far, far better thing that I do, than I have ever done"

But why is such a sacrifice necessary? How does it help Sydney, or stop a Reign of Terror? Image
Beyond saving Charles, this act redeems Sydney’s life:

His entire existence becomes one of beauty

But Sydney’s sacrifice isn’t just an act of personal redemption:

It’s an act of grace that counteracts the wrath of the French Reign of Terror Image
Sydney’s sacrifice didn’t literally stop the Reign of Terror, but it points to a crucial truth:

Tyranny is built on wrath

You don’t defeat violence with violence for “whoever slayeth man, vengeance shall be taken on him sevenfold”

Wrath begets wrath until society dies Image
Instead, you resist wrath with grace

Sydney - by laying down his life - resisted the cycle of violence that fueled the revolution…

His sacrifice reminds us that the martyr is the ultimate hero, because the martyr’s grace restores sanity to a fallen world Image
It’s the same truth as Christ on the cross

It’s why Solzhenitsyn said you fight tyranny by “resisting the lie,” even if you die for it

The answer to a reign of terror is an act of mercy:

You find your life by losing your life in love for The Good Image
Hence Sydney didn’t find his life until he was under the guillotine

His sacrifice openly defied one of the greatest tyrannies known to man

We face the same challenge - not necessarily to be martyrs - but to grow the same courage as Sydney:

To bring grace to a world of evil... Image
Though we don't live in Revolutionary France, lies run rampant today more than ever:

Anyone can be captured by wrath, yet the most radical resistance is a charitable act of grace

More than saving your soul, your small acts of mercy may help in setting the whole world right Image
I go deeper on topics like this in my free newsletter:
seandiscourse.com
Bonus:

I offer faith and 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

Aug 8
Orwell, Huxley, and Nabokov were all inspired by one banned book

It laid the foundation for every great dystopian novel of the 20th century:

Including 1984 and Brave New World

Here’s the novel behind all dystopian literature, and what it teaches you about tyranny today…🧵 Image
Yevgeny Zamyatin pioneered dystopian literature with his novel “We”

It follows a futuristic society, run by an authoritarian government called the One State

The government celebrates one ideal above all costs:

Social Order, by any means necessary Image
This order is achieved by dehumanization

Freedom, liberty, and humanity are suppressed

For instance, no one has a name in this world

Instead everyone is given a number. Our protagonist, is named “D503”

Why numbers instead of names? Image
Read 19 tweets
Aug 6
Few novels were quite as controversial as Dostoevsky’s The Demons

Publishers censored the story — they said it was vile and graphic

Dostoevsky said it was brutal, but necessary

Here’s what he wrote, and why it was deemed too dangerous for print…🧵 Image
Demons is Dostoevsky’s famous warning against nihilism

He equates nihilism to a “demon,” that drives humanity to destruction…

The story takes place in a quaint Russian village

All is peaceful to start, but after two nihilists show up, strange things begin to occur Image
The nihilists — Pyotr and Stavrogin — have one goal:

Create a utopian revolution

To do this, however, they believe they must destroy the “oppressive,” chains of society

This means sow chaos and disorder by any means… Image
Read 21 tweets
Jul 31
Freud got Oedipus wrong

The myth is not about inc*st and repressed desire

Its much deeper — the story reveals a heartbreaking flaw of human nature

This one flaw haunted Aristotle, and shaped 3,000 years of Western thought on the soul…🧵 Image
As a recap, Oedipus’ story begins with a prophecy:

King Laius of Thebes is told his son will murder him and marry Laius’ wife (the child’s mother)

To escape fate, he abandons Oedipus to a shepherd, who delivers Oedipus to Corinth Image
Later on, a full grown Oedipus is told the same prophecy:

“You’ll murder your father and marry your mother”

He flees Corinth, fearing King Polybus is his father

Ironically, running from his destiny only delivers him to fate Image
Read 21 tweets
Jul 30
How can a good God let you suffer and die?

Tolkien said a 600 year old poem had the answer to this question

He spent over 25 years reading, studying and teaching it to students

Here’s the poem, and what it taught him about God, grief, and finding hope in the face of death…🧵 Image
“Pearl,” was a 14th century medieval poem

It follows a father’s grief — his 2 year old daughter, Pearl, just died

Her loss has devastated him and made his life seem meaningless

Even worse, his grief is no ordinary grief Image
The father’s grief is destroying him:

He SHOULD move on, but doesn’t want to — he’d rather die than live without Pearl

He’s not just battling grief, but struggling for a will to live

On the cusp of death, he falls asleep dreaming of his daughter… Image
Read 22 tweets
Jul 22
Solomon was the wisest man to ever live

He wrote divine proverbs, built God’s temple, and ruled a golden empire

Yet one fatal flaw destroyed it all, and his empire crumbled

Here’s the sin that ensnared Solomon, and how it still destroys civilizations to this day…🧵 Image
Solomon’s glory shined early

He found favor with God and was granted one wish from the Lord

His wish:

“Give your servant an understanding mind to govern your people,

That I may discern between good and evil” Image
His request was granted:

“God gave Solomon wisdom and understanding beyond all measure”

He ruled as a benevolent King and led Israel to prosperity

Yet more impressive than his decrees, was his legendary proverbs Image
Read 14 tweets
Jul 21
Orwell was a staunch socialist

But everything changed when he saw real poverty

He saw untold horrors in a mining town, and wrote a report that sent socialists into a fury

Here’s what he saw, and the rot it revealed at the heart of socialism…🧵 Image
Orwell writes his critiques in his work “The Road to Wigan Pier”

It’s comprised of 2 parts:

Part 1 shows the life of working class miners in England

Part 2 is Orwell’s critique against socialism

First here’s what Orwell saw on his visit to a mining town Image
The company housing for the miners was squalid

Orwell stayed in shared houses with the workers

The homes were rat-infested with mold, filth and often no indoor toilets

Some neighborhoods even had sewage covering its streets Image
Read 21 tweets

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