C
Cecilianus
Guest
There are a variety of extremes regarding the historical record. The argument many Orthodox, led by the controversial Blessed Seraphim Rose, make is that God would not let His anointed Tzar be misled, and therefore Rasputin must be a saint and all historical evidence to the contrary must be rejected. The extreme version of the argument against him can be found in Warren H. Carroll’s 1917: Red Banners, White Mantles, which portrays him as being demonically possessed and surviving many assassination attempts which can only be explained through his body being kept alive by preternatural forces. (He was given more than ample doses of poison, shot multiple times at point-blank range, clubbed on the head which later hit the bridge he was thrown off of, and he survived under the ice long enough to break his arms free of his bonds.)Alex, I hope you are correct in your assessment of the Tsarina; the historical evidence is far darker, ignoring for the moment the Soviet spin put upon it later.
Rasputin was a heretic. His teachings included the value of libidinousness, fornication and gluttony. The general consensus is that he was either possessed or a demonic being incarnate. Especially after being tossed into the river for dead, UNDER the ice, and showing up a few days later.
And hemophilia does not work such that simple calm would stop the bleeding. The disease is a defective clotting factor.
Dr. Carroll is an incredibly story-teller (he originally aspired to be a novelist, not a historian), but his account is more interesting than that of his murderer, Prince Felix Yusupov, which I read right after reading Dr. Carroll’s book. Yusupov portrays him just as an evil man - certainly not a saint, but not necessarily a possessed man either.
His lewd behavior, his association with the khlysty, and his rape of a nun are generally not disputed, and seem to indicate that he was trying to parody or imitate the behavior of the yurodivy. His healing of the Tzar’s son over telegraph cannot be explained through natural causes - the placebo effect over telegraph is not going to make one’s blood clot - but in the absence of natural cause I would not necessarily rush to assert a preternatural cause. Sometimes we just don’t know what happened, and things happen that we have no explanation for. That’s life.