15 Quotes by Malcolm Muggeridge about Thinking

  • Author Malcolm Muggeridge
  • Quote

    I think that in free societies, and we're constantly talking about living in free societies, aren't we, in contradiction with unhappy people who live in non-free societies, that the benefit, the dividend of living in a free society is that you say what you think.

  • Tags
  • Share

  • Author Malcolm Muggeridge
  • Quote

    I hate government. I hate power. I think that man's existence, insofar as he achieves anything, is to resist power, to minimize power, to devise systems of society in which power is the least exerted.

  • Tags
  • Share

  • Author Malcolm Muggeridge
  • Quote

    This horror of pain is a rather low instinct and... if I think of human beings I've known and of my own life, such as it is, I can't recall any case of pain which didn't, on the whole, enrich life.

  • Tags
  • Share

  • Author Malcolm Muggeridge
  • Quote

    People think of faith as being something that you don't really believe, a device in helping you believe simply it. Of course that is quite wrong. As Pascal says, faith is a gift of God. It is different from the proof of it. It is the kind of faith God himself places in the heart, of which the proof is often the instrument... He says of it, too, that it is the heart which is aware of God, and not reason. That is what faith is: God perceived by the heart, not be reason.

  • Tags
  • Share

  • Author Malcolm Muggeridge
  • Quote

    I have absolutely no doubt that there is an intense anti-Americanism in all Western Europe, and I think the reason for that is a very, very simple one.

  • Tags
  • Share

  • Author Malcolm Muggeridge
  • Quote

    I think that the essence of a free and civilized society is that everything in it should be subject to criticism, that all forms of authority, should be treated with a certain reservation.

  • Tags
  • Share

  • Author Malcolm Muggeridge
  • Quote

    In his own lifetime Jesus made no impact on history. This is something that I cannot but regard as a special dispensation on God's part, and, I like to think, yet another example of the ironical humour which informs so many of His purposes. To me, it seems highly appropriate that the most important figure in all history should thus escape the notice of memoirists, diarists, commentators, all the tribe of chroniclers who even then existed

  • Tags
  • Share

  • Author Malcolm Muggeridge
  • Quote

    Politicians get their power too late, and I think that he has inherited an impossible situation in which he is ill-equipped to deal.

  • Tags
  • Share

  • Author Malcolm Muggeridge
  • Quote

    I think that Sir Winston Churchill, in the period that the Germans occupied the Channel Ports, when the whole war hung in issue, fulfilled a role, which is as great as any role in our history.

  • Tags
  • Share