History’s Detectives

The search for the historical anything is an exercise in fantasy and imagination, a good movie, but not good for much else. C.S. Lewis noted that reviewers of his books, speculating on how they were written and other such intimate historical matters, were almost universally wrong. He wondered out loud why we should presume historical critics of the past, sometimes of a past stretching back for millennia, should be taken at all seriously. Why should we consider with any weight any scholar’s statement concerning the background and shaping of St. Matthew’s gospel (to use only a single example)? The answer is simple: we shouldn’t.

This is not to say that we should not consider history, nor ask historical questions. It is rather to affirm that things in history have long since passed beyond the bounds of human knowing. Those who make great assertions about the historical reasons for their present decisions are not saying anything about the nature of history, but are revealing the nature of their ideological commitments.

The “history” with which we live today, is not, in fact, history, but those parts of “history” which are present. The Scriptures are not only a historical book, but are also a present book. I have a copy in my computer. Thus the Orthodox do not think of Tradition as something of the past, but something of the present. Tradition is literally, “that which is handed down,” paradosis. It is not a reference to that which was, but to that which is. Modernists do not reject the past when they ignore Tradition – they ignore part of the present for their own perverse reasons.

Every human being is himself a Tradition. The life which I have is not a new, modern creation which suddenly came into being. The better part of all human experience lives within me (in some form) in the record of my biology. However, the modern world treats us as though we were each a tabla rasa.

There is a false dilemma created by the modern consciousness (which itself is strange form of selective amnesia). The dilemma is to insist that all knowledge of the past, resides in the past, and that modernity can only approach it as detective and archaeologist. We dig for knowledge of the Roman empire when its language and history exist in our tongues. We are taught that these ancient lives belong to aliens, as though the past were another planet and not the extension of the present through time.

Many Christians suffer deep anxiety from this false consciousness. Some fool with a PhD announces that the Christian story is simply the propaganda of a Roman ruling class to pacify the Middle East (an actual recent Facebook headline), and the faith of the weak is shaken. A public whose knowledge of its own civilization extends no further back than the last episode of TMZ is undermined by every pseudo-historian’s claim (cf. Mary Magdalen, Gospel of Judas, Rudolf Bultmann, Jack Spong, etc.).

But these modernist delusions are not the enemy. Their invitation is to a world of false historicism in which the past is inherently lost and obscured. Christian fundamentalists (of whatever stripe) who search for historical remnants of Noah’s Ark (or other similar forays) in order to substantiate the historical claims of Scripture have already consigned themselves to lives of anxiety and their children and grandchildren to unbelief. For it is the nature of the modern conception of history that the past is lost. Even the discovery of its older artifacts is not its restoration to the present, but the unearthing of artifacts into the maw of historicist argument. Our knowledge of what is past, as a part of our present, properly rests on other grounds.

St. Paul’s treatment of the resurrection of Christ, makes use of what moderns would call “historical evidence”:

For I delivered to you first of all that which I also received: that Christ died for our sins according to the Scriptures, and that He was buried, and that He rose again the third day according to the Scriptures, and that He was seen by Cephas, then by the twelve. After that He was seen by over five hundred brethren at once, of whom the greater part remain to the present, but some have fallen asleep. After that He was seen by James, then by all the apostles. Then last of all He was seen by me also, as by one born out of due time. (1Co 15:3-8 NKJ)

He cites the eyewitnesses – or so it would seem. However, the thrust of his statement is not to the eyewitnesses as such, but to that “which was delivered.” This is the paradosis, the Tradition.  For that which was delivered to the faithful in Corinth (as it was doubtless delivered to every Church of apostolic foundation, and to every Orthodox believer to this day) is the living content of the Apostolic witness. The resurrection of Christ is not news about a fact, but the very content of the Tradition itself. The historical evidence of the resurrection is the continuing life of the Church itself. The risen Christ is eaten and drunk by believers to this day. St. Paul adds himself to the list of “historical” witnesses. The exact character of that appearance is not described by Paul himself (it may be gleaned from the book of Acts). But he does not denigrate his own experience and witness – though it occurred at least three years after the ascension of Christ.

The security of our faith is not found within the diggings of archaeology or the arguments of textual scholars. It rests within the living Tradition, the paradosis, that abides in the Church. That Tradition does not lessen the importance of the witness within the Scriptures, nor the continuing emptiness of the tomb in Jerusalem. But it describes the proper nature and character of that witness. The witness of the resurrection is indeed that which is delivered to us – it abides.

 

About Fr. Stephen Freeman

Fr. Stephen is a retired Archpriest of the Orthodox Church in America. He is also author of Everywhere Present: Christianity in a One-Storey Universe, and Face to Face: Knowing God Beyond Our Shame, as well as the Glory to God podcast series on Ancient Faith Radio.



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33 responses to “History’s Detectives”

  1. Michael Bauman Avatar
    Michael Bauman

    Clarity! The first time I walked into an Orthodox Church Jesus and Mary were/are so present and the various saints and some of the parishioners.
    Sin, it seems always wants to drag me back into the past.
    “This is the day the Lord has made! Let us rejoice and be glad in it!”

  2. Todd Moore Avatar
    Todd Moore

    I was going to make a light-hearted comment based on the movie, “The Big Lebowski” to the tune of, “Well, you know, the Tradition abides.”
    But it struck me as interesting (no, not profound) that those lines of script become coherent in a Christian sense simply by two substitutions (“Lord Jesus” and the idea of “Intercession”) into the very last lines of this (old favorite) movie where this quotation comes from.
    FYI – Here is the original:
    DUDE
    “Take care, man, I gotta get back.”
    THE STRANGER
    “Sure. Take it easy, Dude–I know that you will.”
    DUDE
    “Yeah man. Well, you know, the Dude abides.”
    THE STRANGER
    “The Dude abides.”
    “I don’t know about you, but I take comfort in that.
    It’s good knowin’ he’s out there -the Dude, takin’ her easy for all us sinners.”

    And here is the script with those two substitutions:
    LORD JESUS
    “Take care, man, I gotta get back.”
    THE STRANGER
    “Sure. Intercede for us, Lord Jesus–I know that you will.”
    LORD JESUS
    “Yeah man. Well, you know, the Lord Jesus abides.”
    THE STRANGER
    “The Lord Jesus abides.”
    “I don’t know about you, but I take comfort in that.
    It’s good knowin’ he’s out there – the Lord Jesus, interceding for all us sinners.”

  3. Michael Bauman Avatar
    Michael Bauman

    Although my American History and Philosophy of History Professor defined history as: “the creation of a past that allows for a future into which can come the ever emerging now.”

  4. Fr. Stephen Avatar

    Todd,
    That’s interesting. I have to confess that I’ve never seen the movie…I keep meaning to. Christ indeed abides.

  5. Cliff Avatar
    Cliff

    Outside of Orthodoxy, I have only witnessed paradosis one other time. When I was living in Oak Ridge, I watched Queen Elizabeth’s annual visit to the Houses of Parliament. I knew about “Black Rod” banging on the closed Parliament doors, begging for the Queens admission. But what I found out as I watched; is there is also a member of Parliament who is kid-napped by the crown and held hostage at Buckingham Palace. These actions have a symbolic historical meaning, but more than that it’s the way their government is, not just the way it was. Seeing this gave me great understanding of how the Church treats the physical and symbolic.

  6. Ook Avatar
    Ook

    “The modern world treats us as though we were each a tabla rasa”, perhaps on the basis that we live in such an inevitable era: the end of history and all that nonsense.

  7. Simon Avatar
    Simon

    I am as critical as the next person. The difference might be that I am generally much more monomaniacal than most. And yet I am compelled to accept it’s authenticity. The grass is green, the sky is blue, and on all that is good and holy it is as a matter of fact authentic.

  8. Simon Avatar
    Simon

    The nagging question is “How do I know?”

  9. Fr. Stephen Avatar

    Simon,
    When I was in Anglican seminary (which was dominated by a strong critical approach to everything), I had opportunity for a conversation with the late Lord Ramsey, retired Archbishop of Canterbury. He was a highly regard theologian. My question to him was about the “need to know.” He acknowledged the many critical problems but said, “We know enough to be saved.”

    I found it helpful at the time. So, the question became, “Do I know enough?” It reframed the problem.

    As years have gone by I don’t tend to ask the question very much anymore. These days it’s much more like, “What am I doing with the little that I know?”

  10. Matthew Avatar
    Matthew

    Fr. Stephen wrote:

    “Christian fundamentalists (of whatever stripe) who search for historical remnants of Noah’s Ark (or other similar forays) in order to substantiate the historical claims of Scripture have already consigned themselves to lives of anxiety and their children and grandchildren to unbelief.”

    You have described in one sentence what it took me years to learn when I was crawling out of Christian fundamentalism. In terms of the Bible, many slick talking atheists can scare the belief right out of the most ardent Christian fundamentalist when they begin to point out historical problems, textual inconsistencies, etc. within the biblical text. As a Christian fundamentalist I was absolutely crazy about having to prove historical and textual certainty and was taught that if there wasn´t such rational certainty our faith was meaningless; a house of cards was doomed to collapse.

    Fr. Stephen also wrote:

    “The security of our faith is not found within the diggings of archaeology or the arguments of textual scholars. It rests within the living Tradition, the paradosis, that abides in the Church.”

    From my personal vantage point, this is the absolute game changer. Admittedly, for years I waded in the waters of a Protestantism that went so far as to call this need for certainty a sin and spent much time teaching a new way forward. That teaching was very valuable to me for a season, but ultimately it was without a firm foundation (and often very loose with the person and work of Jesus Christ) and left me longing still. I guess I wondered, could there actually be a place where the Bible sat in its assigned and proper location and where I could trust the revelation of God in Jesus Christ beyond historical and textual certainty?

    I suppose it was then when I began to take seriously the Church being the pillar of truth (1 Timothy 3:15), and if this Church is the pillar of truth, then the Tradition of which it so boldly speaks must also be true.

    I can now lay down my historical pickaxe. I can now lay down my textual defenses.

    Glory to God for that!

  11. Matthew Avatar
    Matthew

    For me, I used to think I could know through my brain, all my senses, and my ability to reason. Then I began longing to know things beyond what those faculties could teach me.

    My epistemology has greatly changed over the years. I now accept that truth … all capital “T” truth — moral and religious … the beautiful, good and true must be revealed; must appear; must be experienced from something beyond and outside myself and my rationality.

    As a fundamentalist Christian I tried and tried to find that revelation in Holy Scripture alone. It was a fool´s game. Many people trust in themselves, or science, or something else to reveal to them truth. I don´t think these things works either.

    At the end of the day, the revelation of Truth and our questions of knowing must begin and end somewhere else ….

  12. Lewis Hodge Avatar
    Lewis Hodge

    “Do I know enough?” This is a helpful question, Fr. Stephen, but it’s not an easy one. I suspect many of us ask this subconsciously but would benefit from raising it to a conscious level. When we can answer, “Yes, that’s all or more than I need to know,” that should bring peace to our minds.

  13. Justin Avatar
    Justin

    Fr Stephen wrote: Christian fundamentalists (of whatever stripe) who search for historical remnants of Noah’s Ark (or other similar forays) in order to substantiate the historical claims of Scripture have already consigned themselves to lives of anxiety and their children and grandchildren to unbelief.

    Count me (for a time a least) and my children (we are “their children and grandchildren”). While I am following The Way, again, my children, whatever level of “believer” they may be, are not. To this point I have blamed myself, yet I cannot save my children. “Anxiety and unbelief” have been the hallmarks of my family life. Yet somehow God has seen and continues to see us through it all. Maybe, if I somehow find peace, the others around me will be saved.

    Lord, have mercy.

  14. Michael Bauman Avatar
    Michael Bauman

    Matthew, as someone who studied history and different approaches to it, I knew that an historical approach to Christianity was never going to work. So when I went looking for Jesus, I took an experiential approach. I found He is real, but without proper structure, as in the Sacraments and teachings of the saints, the experiential alone is just as dangerous if not more so than what you have gone through. .
    That took me 13 years to find the Church My late wife and infant son were received into the Church in 1986.
    Jesus is merciful beyond any of my understanding. “The Cross, the Grave, the glorious third day Resurrection and Ascension.”

    Each of these events has a specific historical reality, but also a broader continuing experience which we can enter into through the Holy Sacraments.

    As we continue to receive Him in our hearts, minds and bodies a transformation occurs. Bit by bit.

    Blessed be our Lord, God and Savior.

  15. Matthew Avatar
    Matthew

    Thanks so much for your continued testimony and witness, Michael, in this space. I do appreciate it.

    I couldn´t agree more with your statement about the dangers of experience alone.

    Michael said:

    “Each of these events has a specific historical reality, but also a broader continuing experience which we can enter into through the Holy Sacraments.

    As we continue to receive Him in our hearts, minds and bodies a transformation occurs. Bit by bit.

    Blessed be our Lord, God and Savior.”

    Bit by bit … yes Michael … bit by bit. Thank you again for your thoughts. As I stated earlier, I couldn´t agree with you more!

  16. Nathan Fischer Avatar
    Nathan Fischer

    Father, a question that arose while reading this…

    I grew up in an environment that was heavily oriented toward the historical (as you’ve noted in your post). I spent many years reading books, attending seminars, etc, on these sorts of things (creation sciences, Biblical archeology, etc). I also spent years reading economics and the history of political economy in the West (which did, ultimately, result in reading about modernism, which was helpful, but the rest of it… oof). I could list many other topics that I’ve invested enormous amounts of my time into studying, only to later discover that it wasn’t very worthwhile, in fact, is largely false knowledge and may have done more harm than good. I don’t even know what of it all is “true” and what isn’t anymore.

    It feels like I wasted vast swaths of my life with this nonsense. And I still have all this stuff rolling around in my head. When I stop to think about how much of my life I’ve spent on this, it can become overwhelming sometimes. I know that I didn’t know better. But it’s still painful to think about.

    What should someone like myself do with this accumulated “false knowledge” and what would you say to someone who feels like so much of their studying has turned out to be a waste?

  17. Michael Bauman Avatar
    Michael Bauman

    Nathan, I have offered up my false knowledge to Jesus in thanks because even the craziest bits I pursued has some truth in it or an understanding that illuminates my heart when I offer it up in thanksgiving.
    Our Lord transforms everything.
    May God continue to draw you to Himself and illumine your heart.

  18. Michael Bauman Avatar
    Michael Bauman

    Nathan, today’s Scripture readings shed light on these questions too.

    https://www.oca.org/readings

  19. Matthew Avatar
    Matthew

    Hello Nathan. I have thought nearly the same way about the things you mention. I look forward to Fr. Stephen´s thoughts if he has any about this.

  20. Kenneth Avatar
    Kenneth

    Nathan,
    I think your question will resonate with almost everyone, because we all have wasted time in some way or another, which is part of the human condition of sin. One thing I’m doing in response is to immerse myself in Orthodox worship as much as possible, and in the Gospels and Psalms, and try to live the Orthodox life to the fullest extent that I can, as if making up for lost time (because I am). Recognition of our wasted time and repentance for it can surely be used by God for our salvation, and transformed into good as only God can.

  21. Simon Avatar
    Simon

    Is it false knowledge to say something isn’t true when it isn’t true? That’s actually a non-trivial accomplishment. I think the point isn’t that using critical methods to study the Bible or Christian history isn’t wrong or misdirected. It’s important. The point, I think, is that many important realities are obviated through reduction.

    For example, the human individual is lost on reduction when studying the neurochemistry. There is no “you” in a synaptic cleft. But, I am glad someone is studying the brain on a granular level because it is much needed research in the development of therapeutics. The person is a global phenomenon of the system as a whole. When reduction is applied in order to understand how neurons communicate the person vanishes. That doesn’t make the person less real, but it means that certain realities are only perceived at scale.

    This is why the image of the Shroud of Turin is so brilliantly placed at the header of this article. The image only exists on the surface of the forward or front side of the cloth fibers. It doesn’t penetrate the fibers at all. AND it was only by taking a negative image that the 3D details can be seen. (AI has created a beautiful image of the face in the Shroud if you haven’t seen it.) The image in the Shroud is a global property that is perceived when standing from a distance and is lost on closer inspection, reduction. BUT, thanks to technology it is best seen in three-dimensions *ahem* via negativa–see what I did there? Perhaps that is how one best approaches the Scriptures, Tradition, Liturgy, all of it.

  22. Matthew Avatar
    Matthew

    Hello again Nathan. Since reading your post earlier, I have started to reflect on what I have learned over the years … particularly as it pertains to Christian theology and spirituality. It´s interesting really … while much of what I learned I was convinced was true, it is clear that much of it was not true. That said, had I not walked down that path, I don´t think I would have ended up where I now find myself — which for me is a much, much better place. I think, maybe, arriving at a much better place sometimes requires that we learn, experience and do things that maybe now seem like wastes of time but were in fact necessary components for the journey forward … for the journey home.

  23. Fr. Stephen Avatar

    Nathan,
    My parents became Orthodox at age 79. I remember my father saying to me one day, “I feel like I’ve wasted so much time.” I said to him, “Dad, the last time I checked, in only mattered how we finish the race.” He made it to the finish line…just fine.

    In truth, all of us are “prodigals” – and have spent time in a “land that was waste.” There are lots of kinds of wastelands. But, I think that, in Christ, the Cross reaches back and gathers everything that is “waste” into the reality that is our salvation. In God, nothing is wasted.

    Some of my most “wasted” time has contributed greatly to who I am – frequently in unexpected ways. And there’s not really a way within our power that we could make any of our time “unwasted.” That is a work that belongs to God.

    The wise thief, we sing during Holy Week.

    The wise thief
    in a single moment, O Lord,
    Was made worthy
    of Paradise
    By the wood of the Cross
    illumine me as well
    and save me.

    I do not think that there will be grades for efficiency when we get to heaven. It is for us not the “waste” the single moment that is “now” – but to give it wholly to Christ.

  24. Fr. Stephen Avatar

    Simon,
    I thank God for such knowledge, as well.

  25. Simon Avatar
    Simon

    I think of my time as a Jehovah’s Witness. Talk about a waste of time. Let me tell you a story and you can judge for yourselves the value of the story.

    During my time as a Witness I had aspirations to become a missionary. Witnesses support couples in the mission field, but they do not support families. So, the question posed to my first wife and I was “How are you going to handle birth control?” Three elders in my local congregation suggested I get a vasectomy rather than my wife get a hysterectomy. THAT WAS THEIR ADVICE BASED ON THEIR COLLECTIVE WISDOM. Also, I was 20 years old at the time. Well, we found a doctor who would do the procedure for $325, but he insisted that we wait until I turned 21. Yeah. Well, 5 years later I experienced a medical problem that revealed the vasectomy was botched by the physician which resulted in atrophy that increased my risk for testicular cancer–which I got 12 years later.

    A decision I made when I was 20 resulted in an accident that has left me with the inability to father my own children. How’s that for wasted time?

    But, had none of that happened I would not have Micah as a son. And every day with that boy is a privilege. I didn’t know what it was like to love someone until Sarah and I adopted Micah. And if I had to do it all over again I wouldn’t change a thing. As long as I got to be with this boy and watch him be who he is day in and day out, then it was all worth it.

    I’m not saying it wasn’t tragic or evil. I am saying that love is the difference between life and death. and this love for my son has given me new life and knowing that my life, as imperfect as it was, lead me to him, then I think I will eventually find peace with it.

    But the spiritual abuse of those elders–who by the way take no responsibility whatsoever–has taken a pound of flesh in my ability to trust. Some wounds probably need two lifetimes to heal.

  26. Simon Avatar
    Simon

    I need to correct myself. The image on the Shroud is actually a negative image. And when a photograph is taken the negative shows up as a positive image. I have done this with my seven year old where we have printed out an image of the shroud and installed a negative image app for the phone camera. We take a picture of the printed copy of the shroud and guess what? It comes out as a positive image. My apologies.

  27. Stuart Marlatt Avatar
    Stuart Marlatt

    I very much appreciated this post, Father Stephen; as a young believe I also got badly sidetracked by the need to confirm the ‘historicity’ of various biblical accounts. It has been so freeing to understand these stories in a larger and more open context. What you clarify here, reminding us that the environment in which we are immersed is not distinct from history but is in fact permeated by all of history, is both obvious and a wonderful epiphany; that this also means that we live within a continuum extending from Eden to Bethlehem to Calvary to our present is humbling.

    Related to this, I’d like to recommend Dr. Corey Olson (the ‘Tolkien Professor’ and friend to listeners of Fr. Damick’s Amon Sul podcast), who been working through a very thorough, close reading of 1 John in his Students of the Word podcast. In the opening portion of Session 67 (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_dc0ysNtuRA), he discusses differences between how we as modern people think about quotations, history, etc., and how these things were considered by medieval and ancient peoples. Amongst his comments is the observation that we as moderns tend to be consumed by ‘accuracy’ – often to the point of triviality – while the ancients were much more interest in ‘truth’, even if it is not strictly word-for-word, number-by-number accurate. It’s well worth a listen, especially if one finds disagreements between historical records to be a stumbling block.

  28. Michael Bauman Avatar
    Michael Bauman

    As a young man, I spent quite a bit of time in educational and community theater. There I learned a technique called “empathetic projection”. It allows an actor to go deeply into a character without loosing one’s core.

    I approached the Scripture before the Church in much the same way. In the Church the empathy is deeper so as to allow transformation.

    I believe there is a core of spiritual truth in each heart that allows us to connect with and know The Truth even in the midst of lies and untruth.

    Guarding one’s heart is difficult and it is easy to mistake how to do it right, but by Jesus’ Grace healing is always possible even from a leprosy of the soul and deep mistakes. Not a return to the way things were, but a gift of wholeness and Joy in the midst of the chaos of the world.

    May the Saints and Holy Angels watch over and protect each of us on the path that is ours and may our paths cross in person…

  29. Edward D Cleland (Euphrosynos) Avatar
    Edward D Cleland (Euphrosynos)

    Thank you Father, for this and all of your writings (of which, I’ve read only a fraction). So, at the risk of coming across as not really understanding this writing (perhaps I don’t); what should be my response to a non-believer friend when he questions the reality of Jesus Christ as the Son of God and the reality of the resurrection? My inclination would be to point out historical and architectural facts to demonstrate proof.

    Christ is in our midst!

  30. Fr. Stephen Avatar

    Edward,
    I would suggest that you begin by telling him why you believe. If historical and archaeological facts are important to you, then, by all means, talk about them. I wouldn’t ignore them. Alone, they’re never enough to make someone believe – because belief is ultimately a matter of the heart. Christ, in the parable of the Rich Man and Lazarus noted that “if they haven’t believed Moses and the Prophets, then neither will they believe even were someone to rise from the dead.” It basically means – if the heart is not open to believing (and there can be lots of reasons for that), then it’s not time yet.

    If you’re looking for good, reliable material on “proofs” of the resurrection – I think that Dr. Gary Habermas (an evangelical) does a very good job of that. There’s a number of Youtubes of his. Lots of people have very little background or solid training in historical studies and don’t really know how to go about thinking when it comes to looking at historical evidence. I think there’s plenty (and it’s important to me). But it’s only one piece of a much larger puzzle of the heart. Be a good friend – don’t argue – listen to what he thinks and why and share what you think and why.

    And then be patient (and pray for him).

  31. Michael Bauman Avatar
    Michael Bauman

    “…belief is ultimately a matter of the heart…”

    Father, that belief came to me, by Grace, in 1970 as I stood on a beautiful hilltop looking west as the sun set and beauty was everywhere. He let me know He was both the Creator and thoroughly a part of the beauty all around and through me.

    I went on a bit of a quest trying to reach communion with Him in my heart and soul.

    In 1986 I walked into St. Mary Antiochian parish in my home town. A building that had been a part of my life because it was in the neighborhood in which I grew up. Always there and always a mystery. Cata-corner across from a large United Methodist Church.

    I walked in, asked one of the ladies what to do and they showed me the way into the Sanctuary. There, Mary greeted me through her icon: More Spacious Than the Heavens, inviting me to worship her Son.

    I sat next to a grandmother who was a generational member of the community back to its founding early in the 20th century as a community of Lebanese immigrants.

    That is Church history.

    My now late wife and apostatized son later moved to my present parish very close to home. My second wife and I still worship there. She came to Orthodoxy because of our similarity to and completion of Native American belief. A lot there.

    Joy, Intra-connection and the Living Presence of our Trinitarian God, even when I try to ignore it, formed and conformed to an incredible living theology that surrounds and intra penetrates my body, mind and soul.

    There is nothing else as complete, living, life giving (if practiced to a consistent degree) and whole. The Holy Sacraments confirm and demonstrate it all. His Grace and Mercy filling all everywhere.

    That is why Mt. 4:17: “Repent! For the Kingdom of Heaven is at hand”; has become a cornerstone for me. Through sincere repentance I am the brought into Communion with Him and others in a beautiful living icon of The Kingdom.

    Glory to God for All Things.

  32. Nathan Fischer Avatar
    Nathan Fischer

    Thank you so much for your reply, Father. Also thank you Matthew, Kenneth, and Simon. “In God, nothing is wasted.” This is so much easier to believe about others than it is to believe about myself. Thank you, Father.

  33. Nathan Fischer Avatar
    Nathan Fischer

    And thank you, Michael, too! I did not intentionally leave you out. But I read your comment yesterday and these today, so of course I forgot. But thank you. 🙂

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  1. And thank you, Michael, too! I did not intentionally leave you out. But I read your comment yesterday and these…

  2. Thank you so much for your reply, Father. Also thank you Matthew, Kenneth, and Simon. “In God, nothing is wasted.”…

  3. “…belief is ultimately a matter of the heart…” Father, that belief came to me, by Grace, in 1970 as I…

  4. Edward, I would suggest that you begin by telling him why you believe. If historical and archaeological facts are important…

  5. Thank you Father, for this and all of your writings (of which, I’ve read only a fraction). So, at the…


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