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Posts Tagged ‘Italy’

Rubicon

Wednesday, July 13th, 2011

I just finished Tom Holland’s excellent book on history of the demise of the Roman Republic called Rubicon. Anyone interested in the perils of our imperiled republic would do well to read it also.

What could lead the proudest, most stubbornly democratic and independent group of people in the history of the world to fall in line behind an Emperor effectively surrendering all power to him? This is the difficult question that Holland poses. He artfully works you toward his answer. Characters such as Marius and Sulla, Cicero and Cato, Pompey and Caesar are all explored. (more…)

In Search of a Classical Christian Education

Tuesday, June 15th, 2010

I have fallen in love with Florence. At first it was a tentative love on my part—they wronged Dante and they act now like he is their favorite son. LIARS! They also have not done a lot of work on plumbing—when “press the button many times” is an instruction superior to sending a handyman, you start to wonder about everyone’s sanity. Still, Florence is incredible. We have been to churches of incredible beauty. Yesterday we were at San Lorenzo. The speaker that dedicated the church on its kickoff Sunday was…guesses…St. Ambrose in AD 390—fresh off of his conversions of that ne’er-do-well, troublemaker Augustine. History really comes to life here. Although there is a darker side, the population is almost completely unchurched now. The feel here is cool, sheik, but empty. They are surrounded by thunderous truth and beauty, but they have abandoned it. Watching Florentines strut around is sort of fun. I think that cool was invented here. Capitalism was invented here as well (the one produced the fuel for the other). The cloth merchants were the driving forces in building the cathedrals. If you intend to buy clothing in Florence, it will look great and you will quickly be poor (not as bad as some parts of NY, however). (more…)

In Search of a Classical Christian Education

Tuesday, June 15th, 2010

As I write this email, I am on a train hurtling down the track headed to Florence. I am making the trek that The Poet Dante always longed to make. He longed for Florence to call him back, to renounce its trumped up charges against him, and to recognize him as its son. Dante never made the trip. He died in exile always longing for Florence…never going home. Tonight, our hotel will be about 300 meters from the Baptistery of St. John the Baptist (who is the patron saint of Florence—or the second patron after Florentine Christians dumped the god Mars for the fiery forerunner of Christ). That building was Dante’s final aim. Florentines took their great poets to the Baptistery of St. John the Baptist (Florentines maintain that the Baptistery was built on the foundation of the ancient temple of Mars) and there crowned them with a simple laurel wreath. They were recognizing that the Holy Spirit who is symbolically given in baptism was working through and in the poet that they crowned. Dante is often pictured wearing the laurel crown. He never received it, however. He died far from home, rejected by his community, longing for their recognition, and never receiving it. They, now, of course, embrace him fully. They crown him daily. Too late say I. (more…)

In Search of a Classical Christian Education

Tuesday, June 15th, 2010

I am writing this from a restaurant in Orvieto, Italy. Emily and I are spending a week here mixing work and pleasure—a mix that makes both better, but more on that later. We are in search of a classical Christian education in the heart of Italy. Today, we are having dinner with John Skillen from Gordon College who runs an art program here in this ancient town in a monastery that was built before Dante was born and before St. Thomas penned the Summa. By the way, he penned some of the Summa while living at one of the other monasteries here in Orvieto. He also wrote the liturgy for the Feast of Corpus Christi here in Orvieto—the feast was first celebrated here in this place. Now, as a Protestant I have all sorts of problems with transubstantiation and some of Aristotelian mix with theology that occurs in Thomas’ mind. As an historian, I cannot believe I am here. Emily is napping now. I cannot sleep. I just want to walk endlessly around. (more…)