
The Kingdom of God Is Within You
Leo Tolstoy was born on a vast Russian estate in 1828, a place of quiet and privilege that would shape everything he became and everything he later sought to destroy. He wrote two of the greatest novels in any language: War and Peace, which dismantled the myth of great men by showing that history is made by the countless small decisions of ordinary people, and Anna Karenina, which asked whether passion alone could ever carry a life. But his novels were only the beginning. In his fifties, the foundations of meaning collapsed beneath him entirely, and he turned to the Gospels with genuine seriousness for the first time. What he found there was not a theology but a practice: nonresistance to evil, love without exception, simplicity, and labor. These teachings cost him his marriage, his comfort, and his standing in the Orthodox Church, which excommunicated him in 1901. They also inspired Gandhi and Martin Luther King Jr., who built movements on the same tradition Tolstoy began.






