“In the spring days and nights of the year 30 A.D. in
Jerusalem, between the feasts of Passover and Pentecost, all of Christendom met
in one upper room of a nondescript house in an out-of-the-way street: a small
group of men headed by a fisherman, and a few women from Galilee. Out of that
one room streamed a historical force greater than any other ever known; no more
than God Himself is it dead today. These years of Christendom’s apparent
eclipse are perhaps the best time to attempt the telling of its full historical
story, from preparation through birth and growth, climax, division, and retreat
– so as to be more ready for its coming resurrection.”
…
“Persons in their earthly lives are indubitably very
much affected by social and institutional structures and by economic
conditions. But the person is ultimately, metaphysically independent of them.
He is not their creature, but God’s
creature.”
- two passages from the Introduction to The Founding of Christendom, by Waren H.
Carroll, of which I am very excited to begin reading this beautiful morning.
More, I am certain, in the days to follow.
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