|
|
history
"its a poor memory that only works backward",
I first heard this on NPR's Speaking of Faith, and understand that it comes from Louis Carol's "Through the Looking Glass". This quotation is not only representative of religion, but also of our understanding of time. Past, present, and future. The single most valued fact of history is that it gives us our understanding of who we are and where we are going. Without knowing the past events and how they shaped us, we would be unable to begin to understand each step we take each day. This is not to say that there is much that we can be certain of. What appears to be true is that we feel we are within this event we call existence and we understand past events and with some skill we can predict the future to some probability of certainty. In order to truly understand, Christ you need to understand the history that gave us him, as well as the history that gave us the Christianity we know now. Our history is a Western history that holds influence from the east dating back 10,000 years. From Zarathustra, to the Eqyptians, from Greece to China we have borrowed from each other to become our modern day humanity. What could be more central to our existence than a true understanding of our history. This history is not so separate from us, there are archetypal memories that are in our genetics. Our motivations, intentions, dreams, and fears come from this history. Immersion in history is like immersion in yourself.
reasearch project guttenberg http://www.gutenberg.org/wiki/Main_Page
![]()
For in the final
analysis, our most basic common link, is that we all inhabit this small
planet, we all breathe the same air, we all cherish our children's futures,
and we are all mortal.
J.F. Kennedy
Dr John Coleman video/Committee of 300
http://restoretherepublic.com/index.php?option=com_contact&Itemid=3
|
Send mail to blockwalk.com
with questions or comments about this web site.
|