[New York]: New American Library (
1968)
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Abstract
“Letters to Two Friends describes the author’s daily life and the development of his thought, and constitutes a kind of ‘journal’ – a journal extending from1926 to1952, throughout almost all of Father Teilhard’s life as a scientist and a priest. The letters come from Peking, Paris and Rome. They mark Father Teilhard’s periodic exile and yet permit us to follow the story of his inner life almost month by month. The spontaneity of his tone and the depth and quality of his feelings and thoughts make these letters a unique document. The first letters date from 1926, when Father Teilhard left his professorship at the Catholic Institute in Paris to lead the life of an explorer in the Far East. This period was one of the most difficult of his life. ‘I would prefer Tientsin to the Catholic Institute’, he wrote to a friend when he embarked for China in 1923. But his second departure in 1926 had something of the aspect of a disgrace. He had been removed from Paris by his superiors, to whom he had been denounced for propagating dubious ideas and who feared a censure that would be prejudicial both to the career of the young palaeontologist and to the good name of the Order. Father Teilhard obeyed in a spirit of faith, but without compromising his principles. A profound change subsequently took place in his scientific vision of the world. Until then passionately interested in the study of prehistory, he now lost his taste for the past. He doubted both his religious vocations and his scientific calling. One of the arresting elements of this collection is its juxtaposition of the social upheavals of our epoch with the story of a man’s steady spiritual growth. Father Teilhard gives a sharply focused picture of the world in which he lives, whether it can be China in the midst of civil war or the France of the thirties under the threat of approaching war, and at the same time portrays the evolution of his inner world, which found final expression in The Phenomenon of Man and The Divine Milieu. Father Teilhard’s allegiance to his Church and to his Order are reflected in these letters. Here we encounter an intellect attempting to reconcile science and religion, evolution and Christianity – a vision that united spirit and matter in a universal process of being and becoming.”- Publisher.