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John Mark Reynolds  Quotes
Boethius moved from considering history from the actor’s point of view to a “timeless” eternal view. From the divine perspective, nothing is ever utterly lost, because all of life is possessed by God in the...

—John Mark Reynolds

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DiscipleshipProspective
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By reading older books we get a taste of the conversation of Heaven.

—John Mark Reynolds

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ClassicsPerspectiveReading
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For Aristotle, it’s not enough simply to act in accordance with the reason once in a while. We must cultivate habits of virtue that develop into a firmly established moral character over a lifetime.

—John Mark Reynolds

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CharacterHabitsPersonality
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Past ages come to us in new ways. For instance, they bore or disturb us. The dead say things we would or could not say in ways that appall , bless, and startle us. Reading...

—John Mark Reynolds

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HistoryPerspectiveReading
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Growing up loving the Bible made me apt to love other books. I don’t love them in the same way I love the Bible, but a lesser love came easily. The splendor of sunlight does...

—John Mark Reynolds

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BibleReadinging
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It has never been easier to get books but never harder to find the quiet needed to study them.

—John Mark Reynolds

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MeditationReadingThinking
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Chaucer, like Homer, writes about a journey, but as a Christian he has a different goal. Homer wanted to go home, but Chaucer’s pilgrims want a place of man’s true home: paradise

—John Mark Reynolds

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DiscipleshipGlory-Of-GodHeaven
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while modernity is not Christianity, modernity is the product of a Christian civilization. Lately the defects of modernity have been made plain to us while its virtues have been taken for granted.

—John Mark Reynolds

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ChristianityCivilizationCulture
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Tolstoy does not tell us how things look to the author; he tells us how they look to the characters. In short, he does not use simile and metaphor. (That astonishing assertion in Wood’s review...

—John Mark Reynolds

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PerspectiveWriting
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Every nation needs more people who love liberty, fear mob rule, and hate tyranny with the consistent logic and passion of Alexis de Tocqueville. He is still quoted by presidential candidates, but too often he’s...

—John Mark Reynolds

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GovernmentLeadership
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Here (in Thomas Aquinas) is the mind that prepared the way for the scientific and industrial revolutions. Here is the mind that was Catholic enough to embrace any good idea, from wherever it came.

—John Mark Reynolds

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Common-GraceCuriosityTechnology
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What makes Geoffrey Chaucer such compelling reading is his creation of a riveting conversation between the ideal and the everyday.

—John Mark Reynolds

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ContemplationIdealismLiterature
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Some Christians believe the harder that one thinks, the colder faith will grow. Augustine grew more brilliant as he grew more pious, more creative as he became more orthodox. His period of heresy was imitative,...

—John Mark Reynolds

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DiscipleshipEngagementEvangelism
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In the time of to Augustine, the conversation in the West mostly had been a Christian reaction to outside ideas. After Augustine, the Great Conversation would be about his ideas for centuries.

—John Mark Reynolds

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CreativityDiscipleshipFaith
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Erasmus’s Bible-saturated mind. His was a mind too broad for fundamentalism, which rejects reason, and too honest for intellectualism, which rejects revelation.

—John Mark Reynolds

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ApologeticsEngagementEvangelism
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The Romans were a strong power before Virgil, but the Greeks had captured their imaginations. While Rome conquered physical Greece, Greek mythology had enveloped Rome. The Empire coul be confident in itself until a Roman...

—John Mark Reynolds

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CultureEntertainmentImagination
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If Christianity is true, then every argument will, if pursued to the end, lead to Jesus.

—John Mark Reynolds

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ApologeticsEvangelism
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Try to get inside the world of Homer and see what it would be like to think with his view of reality. Only then can you begin to judge it, because only then do you...

—John Mark Reynolds

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EmpathyInsightPerspective
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equal.” Some folk are higher placed than others, have more money, were more fortunate in their parents, or are brighter. These gifts do not come to us by merit but by the unfathomable providence of...

—John Mark Reynolds

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DifferenceEqualityGrace-Of-God
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God bestows great gifts on human beings with perfect justice, but not All gifts we are given come from God. Some gifts come from society or culture, and it is here that problems develop.

—John Mark Reynolds

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AssumptionsCultureGrace-Of-God
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Modernity gone wrong has isolated humanity and made human reason autonomous of (and dismissive toward) revelation.

—John Mark Reynolds

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FaithPolarizationReason
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Being well-read is not sufficient, and it isn’t the highest virtue to which we can strive, but it is both necessary and practical. We are, after all, people of the Great Book; no Christian leader...

—John Mark Reynolds

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CuriosityReadingSufficiency
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The fundamentalist burns with anti-intellectual zeal, and in reaction sophists are often swollen up with intellectualism. The fundamentalist and the sophist justify their excesses by the sin of their opposite. Fundamentalism and sophistry give piety...

—John Mark Reynolds

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CommunicationCommunityCulture
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