Through the Church Fathers: June 9
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History is not merely a collection of myths, but a record of God’s unfolding work in the world. In today’s readings, we see how the internal struggle for virtue and the external record of history both point toward the same divine order. Theophilus of Antioch strips away the claim that Christianity is a "new" invention by aligning the biblical timeline with the great epochs of Rome and Babylon, proving that the prophets predate the very poets the Greeks adored. This historical grounding finds its personal counterpart in Augustine’s visceral struggle with the flesh, where the "chaste dignity of Continence" mocks his self-reliance to lead him toward a strength found only in God. Finally, Thomas Aquinas provides the intellectual framework for these emotions, showing that even a passion as volatile as anger can be rightly ordered under reason to serve the cause of justice. From the expansive scale of world empires to the quiet silence of a garden in Milan, these texts remind us that our faith is anchored in both historical fact and the disciplined life of the soul. #ChurchFathers #ChristianHistory #StAugustine #ThomasAquinas #Apologetics #FaithAndReason
Today’s Readings:
Theophilus of Antioch — Theophilus to Autolycus, Book 3, Chapters 27–30 Augustine of Hippo — The Confessions, Book 8, Chapter 11 (Section 27) Thomas Aquinas — Summa Theologica, Part 1–2, Question 42 (Articles 1–4 Combined)
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