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S.J.,Walter J. Ciszek

He Leadeth Me

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A deeply personal story of one man’s spiritual odyssey and the unflagging faith which enabled him to survive the ordeal that wrenched his body and spirit to near collapse.
Captured by a Russian army during World War II and convicted of being a “Vatican spy,” Jesuit Father Walter J. Ciszek spent some 23 agonizing years in Soviet prisons and the labor camps of Siberia. He here recalls how it was only through an utter reliance on God’s will that he managed to endure. He tells of the courage he found in prayer—a courage that eased the loneliness, the pain, the frustration, the anguish, the fears, the despair. For, as Ciszek relates, the solace of spiritual contemplation gave him an inner serenity upon which he was able to draw amidst the “arrogance of evil” that surrounded him. Learning to accept even the inhuman work of toiling in the infamous Siberian salt mines as a labor pleasing to God, he was able to turn the adverse…
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281 printed pages
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Quotes

  • Lewis Apuyehas quoted2 days ago
    Why has God allowed this evil to happen?” Why persecutions? If God must allow natural disasters, or even wars because of human failings, why can’t he at least allow his flock to be shepherded and comforted during such calamities? Surely he could defend and protect his flock instead of having it singled out for special attack such as this. The perplexity and pain grew within me as
  • Lewis Apuyehas quoted6 days ago
    God’s promise of a Redeemer, and the coming of Christ. I spoke of the example he set us of one perfect human life, in which every thought and action was dedicated to doing God’s will, the will of the Father, and so restoring again that perfect order that had originally been God’s plan for all mankind. I talked of how he had suffered every indignity a human being could suffer, from a humble birth, to poverty, to thirty years of the dullest and most routine life of work in a small and backward village, to rejection and suffering and pain and finally death, the end that faces every man. I spoke of his resurrection and victory over death—that central fact of all Christian belief that gives us absolute assurance of life beyond death, of life beyond this life, the assurance that there is a meaning to ma
  • Lewis Apuyehas quoted6 days ago
    Faith, then, is the fulcrum of our moral and spiritual balance. The problems of evil or of sin, of injustice, of sufferings, even of death, cannot upset the man of faith or shake his trust and confidence in God. His powerlessness to solve such problems will not be a cause of despair or despondency for him, no matter how strong his concern and anxiety may be for himself and for those around him. At the core of his being there exists an unshakable confidence that God will provide, in the mysterious ways of his own divine providence.
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