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  1. Thomas Malcolm Muggeridge was born in 1903, named by his father Henry after Thomas Carlyle. A lover of words, Malcolm was to become one of the great literary figures of British public life in the twentieth century. After the death of C.S. Lewis in 1963, many came to regard Muggeridge as Lewis’ successor as a Christian popular apologist.

  2. Malcolm Muggeridge was not merely a "vendor of words," as he invariably described himself, but was also a celebrated author, broadcaster, lecturer, debater, traveller, journalist and television personality, a one-time ardent admirer of the Soviet system, a World War II intelligence agent, and a former agnostic turned committed Christian.

  3. Conversion of a Cynic. Malcolm Muggeridge once distrusted all systems. Now one has met the rigors of his doubt. Last December Malcolm Muggeridge — iconoclast, womanizer, and professional cynic — stunned his native England by converting to Catholicism. Muggeridge took Holy Communion in a small steepled chapel in Hurst Green, Sussex, and when ...

  4. 24 de abr. de 2023 · 10 Important Events in the Life of Malcolm Muggeridge. 1. Muggeridge was born March 24, 1903, in Croydon, South London. His father was an outspoken socialist writer and politician who hoped his son would continue in his tradition. 2. In 1920, Muggeridge entered Cambridge University.

  5. Muggeridge’s life is an illustration of the Pascalian insight that restlessness is a secret friend of boredom, feeding on what it abominates in order to sustain itself. Which is to say that what is boring may also be addictive. Today, to the extent that he is known at all, Malcolm Muggeridge is more notorious than famous.

  6. 62 quotes from Malcolm Muggeridge: 'So the final conclusion would surely be that whereas other civilizations have been brought down by attacks of barbarians from without, ours had the unique distinction of training its own destroyers at its own educational institutions, and then providing them with facilities for propagating their destructive ideology far and wide, all at the public expense.

  7. 7 de ago. de 2019 · By the time he died in November 1990, Malcolm Muggeridge had become the most widely read Christian apologist since C. S. Lewis—much to the disgust of his peers in the press, who had been irritated with him since he first rejected his family faith. For Malcolm had been raised to be a Socialist activist by a quixotic father he dearly loved.