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  1. Há 4 dias · Malcolm Muggeridge, the British journalist and satirist, wrote of this two-directional focus, comparing it to the steeple and the gargoyle which top a great cathedral. “The steeple,” he asserted, “is this beautiful thing reaching up into the sky admitting, as it were, its own inadequacy.”

  2. Há 5 dias · He loved the excitement, the rough edges, the clatter and clash of journalism, particularly daily newspapers. It bears noting that two of the greatest — and most courageous — journalists of the 20th century, Chesterton and Malcolm Muggeridge, both converted to Catholicism. Continue reading at the National Catholic Register.

  3. Há 2 dias · “[Malcolm] Muggeridge,” observed Schmude, “thought Chesterton was ‘a brooding, anguished, frightened spirit’ and beneath his surface sparkle of wit and optimism there lurked a fear that the world is a depraved and diabolic place. Only God could save it.”

  4. Há 2 dias · Malcolm Muggeridge interviews American broadcast journalist Ed Murrow. (1955) 15 mins. Salvador Dali. Malcolm Muggeridge interviews Spanish surrealist artist, Salvador Dali.

  5. Há 19 horas · Malcolm Muggeridge once said that the media are “not the cause of, but the expression of contemporary vacuity.” Mass media is not the enemy; it is a tool. Nor are the people who control it our adversaries. On the contrary, some Christians hold stations there, pushing back by shining the light, and we should pray for their work.

  6. Há 2 dias · For words, like Nature, half reveal And half conceal the Soul within. ~ Alfred Lord Tennyson, In Memoriam Our post-Christian, post-rational era is what science fiction writers and others have been warning us about since the 1930s. Yevgeny Zamyatin, George Orwell, Aldous Huxley, and Malcolm Muggeridge come to mind: euthanasia, social engineering, brainwashing, indoctrination,…

  7. Há 4 dias · Fred Nile was responsible for bringing to Australia Malcolm Muggeridge, a crusty old coverted atheist. He had been the scourge of British clergy and the Royal family but a remarkable conversion changed his whole outlook and he saw the essential contribution of the Christian faith to civilised society.