Top 10 Positive Trends in Global Christianity for 2026

2026 looks bright! God’s grace is moving powerfully, backed by real trends. Here’s the top 10:

1. Gen Z Leads Church Attendance

Young adults are going to church more than any generation—about 1.9 times a month on average. God’s drawing them through authentic worship and community.

2. Christianity Grows Faster Than World Population

Around 2.6 billion believers, growing 0.98% yearly (vs. global 0.88%). Heading toward 3 billion+ by 2050, exploding in Africa and Asia.

3. Bible Sales Hit Record Highs

Over 18 million Bibles sold in the U.S. in 2025, up 11%. Young people and first-time readers are hungry for God’s Word.

4. Campus Revivals Spread Wide

Outpourings at places like Asbury, Ohio State, and more—thousands worshiping, repenting, and getting baptized. Grace awakening colleges!

5. Evangelicals Grow Strong

420 million worldwide, up 1.47% yearly—one of the fastest groups, projected to 621 million by 2050.

6. Missions Reach the Unreached

About 450,000 global missionaries plus millions of national workers. Pentecostals/Charismatics nearing 1 billion by 2050.

7. Persecuted Believers Stand Firm

Over 380 million face high/extreme persecution, yet faith grows in tough places like sub-Saharan Africa. Grace shines in trials.

8. Bible Apps Connect Millions

YouVersion nearing 1 billion downloads worldwide. God’s grace meeting people daily through tech.

9. Unity Strengthens the Church

Young believers focus on Jesus, healing divides across generations and cultures for bolder witness.

10 Grace Quietly Transforms Lives

Through compassion, justice, and gospel sharing, communities heal and hope spreads. God’s favor reaching every corner.

These are grounded in trends and God’s faithfulness. Let’s pray: “Your kingdom come!” (Matt. 6:10) Jesus is moving—2026 will be amazing!

Augustine’s Just War Theory: Holding Back the Darkness

Imagine a world crumbling. The mighty Roman Empire, once unbreakable, fractures under barbarian invasions. In 410 AD, Visigoth warriors led by Alaric sack Rome itself. Panic spreads: How could God allow this?

In Hippo, North Africa, Bishop Augustine (354–430 AD) ponders the heartbreak. Once a pleasure-seeking youth, he’s now a devoted follower of Jesus, the Prince of Peace (Isaiah 9:6).

Christians had long embraced non-violence. But with chaos threatening the innocent, Augustine asks: Can a Christian wield the sword—not for revenge, but to protect and restore peace?

His answer: Just War Theory. Rules to restrain war’s brutality, creating space for God’s Story of Grace—the Trinity’s healing love entering our broken world.

By curbing violence, societies protect dignity, spread the gospel, and build communities of unity and self-giving love (John 17:21–23).

the sack of Rome

The Heart of the Matter

Augustine’s Three Guiding Lights

Augustine wove Scripture, Cicero’s wisdom, and Christ’s love (caritas) into three pillars, inspired by Romans 13:4: God allows authority to “bear the sword” to restrain evil, mirroring Trinitarian order.

“Peace should be the object of your desire; war should be waged only as a necessity… that God may by it deliver men from the necessity and preserve them in peace.”— Augustine, Letter to Boniface

First Light: Just Cause

War must redress grave wrong—like invasion.

“The wrongdoing of the opposing party compels the wise man to wage just wars.” — City of God

Echoes Psalm 82:3–4: Defend the weak and oppressed.

Second Light: Right Intention

Fight from mercy and proportionality.

“If someone remembers they are human, they will grieve that they must fight at all—even in a just war.”— City of God

Seeds of enemy-loving mercy (Matthew 5:44).

Third Light: Aim of Peace

Goal: “Tranquility of order”—lasting flourishing.

“We do not seek peace in order to be at war, but we go to war that we may have peace.”
— Augustine

Calls to unity in the Spirit (Ephesians 4:3).

The Story Continues

How Augustine’s Ideas Shaped History

Refined by Aquinas and others, these principles tamed war—protecting civilians and fostering reconciliation.

  • Middle Ages: “Peace and Truce of God” shields non-combatants.
  • 16th–17th Centuries: Vitoria and Grotius found international law.
  • 1945: UN Charter—limiting war to just causes.
  • 1949: Geneva Conventions—protecting the vulnerable.
  • 1945–1949: Nuremberg Trials—accountability for aggression.
  • Today: Scrutinizing conflicts like the Balkans, Iraq, Ukraine.
Geneva Convention (1949)

The Story Lives On

Why This Matters Today

Evil rages, but authority restrains it (Romans 13:1–4, NIV), making room for redemption.

Augustine’s theory curbs darkness, echoes Trinitarian love, and protects dignity.

In Ukraine and the Middle East, these principles guide debates and safeguard lives—whispering hope amid storms.

“God reconciles through Christ, inviting us into the ministry of reconciliation.”

2 Corinthians 5:18–19

By choosing restraint, we join the Trinity’s healing—building freedom in community. Augustine’s light still shines.

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Article’s Arc

  • “Authority restrains evil so that love may flourish.”
  • “Even in war, mercy must rule the heart.”
  • “Peace should be the object of our desire; war, only a sorrowful necessity.”
  • “When conscience leads the sword, peace becomes possible.”
  • “Every restraint is an act of redemption.”

Story of Grace: God’s Epic Tale of Love and Redemption

Imagine a grand, unfolding story—one that’s bigger than any movie or novel you’ve ever encountered. It’s the story of a loving God reaching out to His broken world, inviting everything and everyone into a forever family. This is Story of Grace, a theological adventure that shows how the Triune God—Father, Son, and Holy Spirit—reveals Himself through creation and redemption. It’s a tale of endless love, where the ultimate goal, as Jonathan Edwards beautifully put it, is “the glory of God” shining through the ongoing rescue and renewal of all creation.

In this narrative, God’s grace dances with our human choices. We respond with faith and obedience, stepping into His invitation. Our personal struggles and triumphs? They’re woven right into this bigger plot, helping us see our place in God’s divine journey and deepening our connections with Him and each other.

The Journey Begins: Exploring an Ancient Vision

This project kicked off in June 2023, but its roots go back thirty years of reflection. It dives into early Christian thought, especially the idea of God’s “divine economy” (oikonomia) from Irenaeus of Lyons. He saw Jesus’ work as a grand “recapitulation”—like hitting the reset button on creation, undoing Adam’s fall and restoring perfect harmony in the life of the Trinity.

At the heart of it all is an ancient hymn from the Bible, in Colossians 1:15–20. This poetic masterpiece celebrates Jesus’ cosmic rule, blending beginnings (origins), salvation, and the grand finale (ultimate ends) into one beautiful tapestry of grace. It echoes the wisdom of Proverbs 8 and the profound Logos in John 1.

Here’s the hymn itself, like a song sung in the early church:

15 The Son is the image of the invisible God, the firstborn over all creation.
16 For in him all things were created: things in heaven and on earth, visible and invisible, whether thrones or powers or rulers or authorities; all things have been created through him and for him.
17 He is before all things, and in him all things hold together.
18 And he is the head of the body, the church; he is the beginning and the firstborn from among the dead, so that in everything he might have the supremacy.
19 For God was pleased to have all his fullness dwell in him,
20 and through him to reconcile to himself all things, whether things on earth or things in heaven, by making peace through his blood, shed on the cross.

Colossians 1:15–20, NIV

This isn’t just poetry—it’s a Trinitarian love story! Jesus, the perfect image of the Father, carries the Father’s creative power and the Spirit’s life-breath, bringing shalom—total flourishing. It points ahead to the new creation in Isaiah 65 and Revelation 21, where everything is made right.

The three Persons of the Trinity? They’re perfectly united yet wonderfully distinct—”three persons, one substance,” as Tertullian put it. And the story’s ending? A glorious future where “God may be all in all” (1 Corinthians 15:28), healing every wound and turning chaos into harmony that mirrors the Trinity itself.

A resemblance of Andrei Rublev’s picture which captures this eternal communion of the Trinity—three angels in perfect, loving unity around a table of invitation.

Three Big Truths: The Heart of the Story

Let’s zoom in on three powerful truths that make this story come alive.

Truth #1: Jesus is the Creator and Redeemer of Everything

“The Son is the image of the invisible God, the firstborn over all creation… And he is the head of the body, the church; he is the beginning and the firstborn from among the dead, so that in everything he might have the supremacy.”

Colossians 1:15, 18

Jesus isn’t just a rescuer—He’s the original Artist and the ultimate Fixer. “Firstborn” (prōtotokos) means He’s supreme in rank and closeness, bridging God’s transcendence (above all) and immanence (within all). Thinkers like Karl Barth, Athanasius (“He became what we are that He might make us what He is”), and Jürgen Moltmann paint this picture: Jesus connects eternity to our world, kicking off a new creation where decay fades and glory shines—even for the groaning earth (Romans 8).

An likeness of The Triumph of the Sacred Heart of Jesus (or Christ in Glory) created by master mosaicist Lucien Bégule

Truth #2: Everything is Being Renewed to Reflect the Trinity’s Beautiful Dance

“For in him all things were created… all things have been created through him and for him.”

Colossians 1:16

Creation flows from the Father’s love for the Son, animated by the Spirit—like a gift wrapped in reciprocal joy. Charles Spurgeon said it perfectly: They’re united in creation and salvation. This mirrors the Trinity’s unity-in-diversity (Herman Bavinck’s “archetype”), where differences strengthen harmony, not conflict.

The Bible echoes this in Ephesians 1:10 (uniting all things in Christ) and Genesis 1’s overflowing “all” and “every.” One day, Revelation 22’s river of life will flow from the throne, healing the curse forever.

The Father as light, the Son as the Lamb, the Holy Spirit as the Dove

Truth #3: Redemption is Cosmic—For All Things

“For God was pleased to have all his fullness dwell in him, and through him to reconcile to himself all things… by making peace through his blood, shed on the cross.”

Colossians 1:19–20

Jesus embodies God’s full “fullness” (plērōma), bringing universal reconciliation (apokatallassō). Irenaeus called it summing up everything in Christ. This isn’t just for people—it’s for the whole groaning creation (Romans 8:22). John Piper nails it: Jesus is the goal of history.

Augustine saw grace turning selfishness into Trinitarian love. The future? A peaceable kingdom where “the wolf shall dwell with the lamb” (Isaiah 11:6).

How This Grand Story Touches Real Life

God’s epic unfolds in surprising ways:

1. Through Salvation History

God reveals Himself gradually, like Jonathan Edwards described—building faith step by step. Israel’s journey (Egypt to freedom, judges to kings, exile to return) showcases grace and faithfulness, all pointing to Jesus: “Whoever has seen me has seen the Father” (John 14:9). It leads to the day we’ll behold His glory fully (1 John 3:2).

2. Through the Nations

God places cultures uniquely so people seek Him (Acts 17:26–27). Athenian democracy hinted at unity in diversity, perfected in Christ’s inclusive family (Galatians 3:28). Revelation 7 shows every nation worshiping together, fulfilling Abraham’s blessing.

3. Through Every Cultural Expression

Languages, art, inventions—all can serve God’s purposes. The Phoenician alphabet helped birth the Scriptures (“Bible” from Byblos!). In the end, the tree’s leaves heal the nations (Revelation 22:2).

The Never-Ending Story: Our Invitation

This Story of Grace brings joy, drawing us into the Trinitarian dance. Like Edwards’ unfinished vision extended today (think Gerald McDermott’s work), the Spirit empowers us to share God’s glory (John 17:5). Creation’s unity and diversity reflect the Trinity, heading toward a renewed world echoing the Father’s love through the Son in the Spirit.

You’re part of this story—what chapter are you living in right now? Maybe you’re in a season of waiting, or of rebuilding, or of quiet transformation. Wherever you stand, the invitation doesn’t change: step deeper into the divine rhythm of grace. The same God who spoke galaxies into being now writes His love through your everyday life. Every act of faith, every movement of hope, every moment of love adds a new line to His unfolding masterpiece. And as this story continues, the greatest surprise remains: it’s not just His story—it’s ours, forever joined in the glory of the Father, through the Son, in the power of the Holy Spirit.

You’re part of this story—what chapter are you living today?

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Arc of this Article

  • Grace isn’t an idea—it’s a divine adventure.
  • Jesus isn’t just Redeemer—He’s the Creator, the Artist behind everything that exists.
  • The Trinity isn’t theory—it’s the heartbeat of reality.
  • What Adam lost, Christ restores—fully, finally, forever.
  • The story ends in resurrection, not ruin.

A Tale of Two Graces: What If the Hinge Of History Had Swung Toward Pelagius?

In the fifth century, the Church stood at a great crossroads, where the teachings of Augustine of Hippo clashed with those of the British monk Pelagius. Augustine proclaimed that mankind, wounded by Adam’s sin, could find salvation only through God’s freely given and continually grace. Pelagius taught that man, born with perfect free will, might attain righteousness by his own efforts and discipline.

In our true history, Augustine’s voice prevailed. But imagine that at the Council of Carthage the bishops—swayed by noble lords who admired Pelagius’s call to rigorous virtue—chose otherwise. They declared Adam’s fall a mere ill example, not a corruption passed to all. Man remained capable, by will alone, of sinless perfection.

This is a mirror held to history: a thought upon how Christendom might have unfolded in the year of Our Lord 1285, eight centuries after the Great Ascendancy of Pelagian doctrine.

The Age of the Great Ascendancy

By the thirteenth century, the teachings of Pelagius had borne fruit across the lands once called Christendom. Monasteries and cathedral schools thundered with the creed of human perfectibility. Grace was no longer a gift unearned, but a crown for those who proved worthy by ascetic toil.

Towns and cities rose fair and orderly, their walls strong, their markets bustling yet sober. Great cathedrals pierced the heavens, built by the sweat of those striving for merit. Yet beneath the grandeur lay a solemn hush—no riotous feasts, no wandering minstrels singing of human folly, for such things smacked of weakness.

The Church, wedded closely to princes and lords, taught that every soul must pursue Perfection as the highest virtue. By one’s thirtieth year, a man or woman was expected to demonstrate mastery: moral purity, bodily discipline, and keen intellect. Those who succeeded were hailed as the Perfecti—knights, abbots, bishops, and merchants of flawless repute—who held the reins of power and honor.

Those who faltered bore the stain of Voluntary Imperfection. They were not pitied as frail children of Adam, but judged as willful sluggards who chose vice over virtue.

The Tale of Brother Caelen the Illuminator

In a quiet scriptorium of a great abbey near Paris, a monk named Caelen laboured over vellum. His quill traced not the usual saints in glory, but a hidden page: a weeping figure beneath a cold moon, tears staining a face twisted in sorrow—the sorrow of a soul that knew its own breaking.

Word reached the abbot. Caelen’s work was deemed a scandal: an admission of weakness, a denial of man’s power to stand unbowed. He was brought before the chapter, accused of spreading despair.

As his precious illuminations were scraped clean and his tools cast into the fire, Caelen stood unrepentant. “Man is not born for such cold perfection,” he whispered. He was sent to a remote house of penance, there to labor in silence until his will bent—or broke. Few returned from such places with spirit intact.

In that moment, one might recall the lost voice of Augustine: that all men share Adam’s wound, that mercy flows from Christ’s Cross, that grace lifts the fallen without merit.

The Bitter Fruits: An Unholy Order

Without the balm of original sin and unmerited grace, charity grew cold. The mutual love of the Holy Trinity, mirrored in human forgiveness, gave way to a sterner trinity: merit, perfection, and rigid order.

A Merit Without Mercy

Success was proof of superior soul. The poor, the sick, the slow of wit—these were seen not as brethren in frailty, but as those who refused the path of righteousness. Alms dwindled; hospitals served only the deserving.

The Burden of Endless Striving

Perfection being declared attainable, every lapse was counted deliberate sin. Souls lived in fear of small faults, confessors harsh, penances severe. Rest was suspect; joy, if unearned by toil, a snare.

A Sharper Division of Estates

The Perfecti rose high: lords spiritual and temporal, unassailable in their virtue. Below them, the mass of imperfect common folk toiled under heavier yoke, blamed for their station. No leper was embraced, no prodigal welcomed home.

A Grace-Filled Reflection

The doctrine of original sin, though sombre, binds us in shared humanity and opens the floodgates of mercy. It reminds us we are dust, yet beloved.

In our true world—shaped by grace’s victory—we are drawn into God’s Story of Grace: wounded, yet redeemed by Christ’s unearned love; called to extend the same to every fallen soul. This breeds hospitals, orders of mercy, songs of forgiveness, and communities where the weak find strength in the Savior’s wounds.

Thanks be to God that the hinge swung toward Augustine, and toward the Cross.

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Side Bar

The Council of Carthage (418): Condemning Pelagianism

In 418 AD, a major church council met in Carthage (North Africa) and took a strong stand against Pelagianism, officially declaring it a heresy. The bishops fully supported Augustine’s teachings on sin and grace. Here’s what the council affirmed and rejected, broken down clearly:

Key Affirmations (What the Council Upheld)

  • All humans inherit original sin from Adam Every person is born with the effects of Adam’s sin—it impacts the entire human race.
  • Divine grace is absolutely necessary for any truly good act Without God’s inner help (grace), no one can do anything genuinely good or pleasing to God.

Key Rejections (What the Council Condemned in Pelagianism)

  • People can obey God’s commands without inner transforming grace
    Rejected: Humans cannot perfectly follow God on their own; they need God’s grace to transform them from within.
  • Grace is given according to human merit
    Rejected: Grace is a free gift from God, not something earned by our efforts or goodness.
  • Adam’s fall harmed only himself, not the whole human race
    Rejected: Adam’s sin affected all his descendants, not just him personally.

This council was a pivotal moment in early Christian theology, solidly backing Augustine’s view of human dependence on God’s grace over the more optimistic Pelagian belief in human ability.

How Augustine’s Doctrine of Original Sin Built Stronger Societies

In the sun-bleached marble halls of ancient Rome’s senate, philosophers dreamed of a perfect republic—reason triumphing over passion, justice flowing naturally from enlightened laws. Yet time and again, greed subverted ideals, and pride corrupted leaders. A young North African bishop, Augustine of Hippo, saw through the illusion. Drawing from his own youthful malice—theft of pears not for need, but for thrill—he recognized a deeper flaw: a will bent inward, seeking self-glory over goodness. This was original sin.

While philosophers decried it as defeatist, Augustine argued honesty about human failure was the foundation for true progress. Societies built on pretense crumble; those acknowledging imperfection endure, receiving grace that comes from the self-giving love of the Trinity.

“Inside every person… a will turned inward, a ‘bent’ that sought its own glory rather than goodness itself.”

What Is Original Sin?

Original sin is like an inherited “bug” in human code—passed down from Adam and Eve’s disobedience, creating a universal tendency toward moral corruption. Humanity can’t fix this flaw alone; it needs divine grace.

Augustine saw the Fall as a cosmic shift: the Serpent’s temptation led Adam and Eve to choose self-rule over God’s. Eating the forbidden fruit (Genesis 3:6) severed harmony, introducing shame and hiding.

“Then the eyes of both of them were opened, and they knew that they were naked..." (Genesis 3:7)

This wasn’t just personal; consequences inherited through generations. From Romans 5:12:

“Therefore, just as sin entered the world through one man, and death through sin, and in this way death came to all people, because all sinned—”

Yet grace abounds: Romans 5:17 promises believers “reign in life” through Christ.

Social Benefits of Embracing Human Flaws

The Birth of Realistic Governance

Augustinian realism birthed systems assuming no one is angelic. Checks and balances prevent power concentration; independent courts pursue imperfect justice; civic engagement fosters responsibility. Humility tempers leadership, curbing tyranny.

This echoes in modern democracies: “If men were angels, no government would be necessary” (Federalist Papers). Reinhold Niebuhr’s Christian Realism added: “Man’s capacity for justice makes democracy possible; but man’s inclination to injustice makes democracy necessary.”

The Engine of Communal Charity

Pagan virtue saw generosity as elite duty. Augustine’s view: shared brokenness demands compassion. No one superior—all flawed, all needy. This sparked organized charity: hospitals, orphanages, enduring welfare networks rooted in empathy over judgment.

“Knowing that they, too, were flawed, citizens were moved to care for the poor and vulnerable.”

The Drive for Ongoing Progress

Utopias collapse in hubris. Augustinian struggle fuels incremental improvement—refining institutions, correcting injustices, pursuing science against decay. Perfection unattainable, progress becomes urgent necessity.

The Foundation of Universal Ethics

Ethics grounded in shared brokenness endure, applying to all. Everyone needs redemption and mercy, fostering compassion across divides.

Conclusion: Grace Amid Imperfection

Philosophers’ proud cities fell; Augustine’s humble truth built resilient ones. In accepting flaws, societies advance—not by human ambition, but grace breaking through pride. Thus, progress mirrors Trinitarian love: mutual, self-giving.

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Sidebar: A Translation That Shaped the West

Augustine’s strict view of original sin stemmed from a Latin mistranslation of Romans 5:12. Original Greek: eph’ hō pantes hēmarton — “because all have sinned.” (Death from individual sins in a corrupt world.) Latin Vulgate: in quo omnes peccaverunt — “in whom all have sinned.” (Guilt inherited directly from Adam.)

This led Western theology to “Original Sin” (inherited guilt + corruption), diverging from Eastern “Ancestral Sin” (corruption + mortality, no personal guilt).

FeatureAugustine’s InterpretationOriginal Greek Interpretation
InheritanceCorrupt nature + personal guilt of AdamCorrupt nature + mortality, no guilt
CausationAll die because born guiltyAll die because of own sins in corrupt world
NameOriginal SinAncestral Sin

Augustine’s Vision: Transforming Society Through Faith

In The City of God, Augustine characterized the City of Man as loud, a quality that reflected its earthly passions and fleeting nature. Its walls were made more of ambition, pride, and ceaseless clamor even more than of stone and mortar. Its streets echoed with the tramp of victorious legions and the roar of the arena crowds. People built colossal monuments, wrote grand histories of their conquests, and told themselves they were great. They sought peace, but it was a fragile peace, purchased with a sword and maintained by the constant flexing of power. He tellingly described that its “victories… either bring death or are themselves doomed to be short-lived.” But in the heart of this earthly city, a different kind of city existed, almost invisibly. Its walls were not of stone, but of faith; its streets, not of paving stones, but of prayer. This was the City of God, and its citizens were mere sojourners in this noisy, transient world. He famously draws out the contrast, “Two cities have been formed by two loves: the earthly by the love of self, even to the contempt of God; the heavenly by the love of God, even to the contempt of self.”

In this article, we will discuss how The City of God helps the church understand its role in world history within God’s Story of Grace. Through this writing, a larger framework for forming the image of the Trinity in the world is provided: a society that reflects a larger community of mutual and self-giving love. Written by Augustine in response to the declining Roman Empire, this work became a guide for believers in the rebuilding of civilization. It explains the difference between the City of Man and the City of God, stressing the need to identify as citizens of heaven while getting involved in the world. Augustine’s ideas urge Christians to stay strong in their faith and focus on justice, compassion, and mercy, ultimately changing society through the love and grace shown by Jesus Christ.

The Two Cities Lived Out

Two Lives: Lucius and Marcus

To better understand The City of God, imagine one citizen of the City of God was a weaver named Marcus. His hands, calloused and nimble, wove tapestries in a workshop that hummed with the daily gossip of the earthly city. Marcus heard the rumors of war, the scandals of the powerful, and the anxious chatter of his neighbors. He listened but did not despair. He knew that the earthly city, with all its glory, was built on a foundation of shifting sand. Its triumphs were fleeting, its peace a temporary truce. His neighbor, a merchant named Lucius, lived for the buzz of the marketplace. He loved the glint of gold, the rustle of contracts, and the thrill of a successful deal. Lucius saw Marcus and his kind as naive fools, waiting for a savior who never came while ignoring the tangible, earthly rewards that were right before them. Yet, despite his successes, a gnawing restlessness plagued Lucius. His wealth brought him security, but it could not buy him rest. His possessions were vast, but he lived in fear of losing them. His victories felt hollow; there was always a bigger deal, a higher rung to climb.

The difference was in their loves. Lucius’s love was a well of self-glorification, a desire to fill an empty space within himself with the perishable goods of the world. It was a love that ultimately led to conflict, as it inevitably pitted his desires against his neighbors. Marcus’s love, by contrast, flowed outward, drawn toward God. This love gave him a peace that Lucius could not comprehend. Marcus worked diligently in the earthly city and sought its temporary peace, not for its own sake, but because it allowed him to live alongside his fellow humans and serve the greater, divine purpose of his eternal city.

When the barbarians finally came, they did not distinguish between the monumental arches and the quiet workshops. The City of Man, for all its pride, crumbled. Lucius’s empire of wealth disappeared in the smoke of the burning porticoes, and his love for self was finally revealed for the hollow, transient thing it had always been. But Marcus found refuge in a church, where the barbarians, surprisingly, did not bring the sword. He saw that the fall of Rome was not the end of the world, but merely the downfall of one earthly city among many. The two cities, interwoven in this mortal world, began to separate in that moment of crisis. Lucius, stripped of all that he had loved, faced a terrifying emptiness. Marcus, though he had lost his home, did not lose his true city. He knew that the end of time would bring the final cosmic separation, when the city of self would face eternal punishment and the city of God would finally rest in an unshakeable, eternal peace.

Two Perspectives: City of God and City of Man

The Romans, as reflected in the attitude of Lucius, had always seen their city as eternal, the pinnacle of human achievement and divine favor. When the Visigoths sacked Rome in 410 AD, it wasn’t just a military defeat; it was a crisis of faith and identity. Augustine provided the philosophical and theological tools to manage this profound grief and, ultimately, to rebuild. He argued that the earthly city, with all its glory and political structures, was inherently transient and flawed. Its collapse was not the end of the world but a predictable outcome of its focus on temporal glory and power.

According to Augustine, the City of God influences the City of Man not by ruling it, but by being a pilgrim community within it. The City of God’s influence comes through its citizens, who, founded on the love of God, live with humility and righteousness, contrasting with the self-love and temporal desires of the earthly city. This influence is a form of spiritual guidance that aims to shape individual behavior and the collective conscience toward eternal rather than material ends. Augustine states as follows:

And the heavenly city—or, rather, that part of it which is on pilgrimage in this mortal existence and which lives by faith—must of necessity make use of this peace as well, at least until this mortal existence, for which such peace is necessary, passes away. Consequently, for as long as it leads its pilgrim life as a captive, so to speak, in the earthly city, even though it has already received the promise of redemption and the gift of the Spirit as a pledge of that redemption, it does not hesitate to obey the laws of the earthly city, by which the things needed for sustaining this mortal life are administered. For, since this mortal existence is common to both cities, its obedience serves to maintain a concord between the two with regard to the things that pertain to our mortal life.

In living out this pilgrim journey, the influence of the City of God expands and brings transformation to the City of Man. This accelerates the influence of forming the trinitarian image on a world more representative of mutual and self-giving love in God’s Story of Grace.

The Sojourner’s Impact

Let’s end this article by looking at three impacts.

Impact # 1: A countercultural alternative to Rome: The City of God functions as a “pilgrim” (alien sojourner)1 in the City of Man, representing a life above and beyond the limits of the Roman Empire. It is beyond in that it contrasts with the pride and self-centeredness of earthly politics. Augustine’s distinction between the temporary “City of Man” and the eternal “City of God” helped Christians understand Rome’s fall and their role in the world. Without this, they might have faced a crisis of faith, viewing the Empire’s collapse as a failure of Christianity instead of a realization of its core teachings.2 Augustine was able to write with a determined but calm serenity, showing a new way to be in and with community.3

Impact # 2: A model of co-existence with the City of Man: The church would learn its spiritual authority while living within the state, engaging in various dialogues that would foster mutual understanding and respect, enabling both the church and the civil realms to coexist. Western civilization would see a way forward to make continuous progress toward the City of God, fostering a deeper understanding of our shared values and ethics while promoting a culture of wisdom, compassion, and inclusivity that transcends barriers and unites diverse communities in pursuit of a common good. It presented Christianity as a coherent alternative to paganism and a new, vital essence that absorbed and recontextualized elements from existing cultures, helping to build a new intellectual and moral framework for a post-Roman world.

Impact # 3: A new vision of history: The classical world viewed history as a cyclical repetition of events, emphasizing the predictable nature of human affairs. The City of God introduced a linear, progressive, and God-centered view of history, from Creation to the Last Judgment. This significant shift in perspective meant that each event in history could be seen as part of a divine plan leading toward a purposeful conclusion. Without this work, classical cyclical narratives might have held more sway, and the worldview which saw history as a divinely guided, purposeful narrative might have developed differently, if at all.4 Augustine’s The City of God fundamentally shifted Western civilization by reframing history as a linear, God-led progression from Creation to Judgment, rather than a cyclical one.

Conclusion

By positioning the City of God as an eternal, spiritual community existing alongside the earthly City of Man, he provided a new, God-centered worldview that offered hope and a profound new interpretation of worldly events, particularly the fall of Rome.5 This innovative perspective not only emphasized the transitory nature of earthly power and success but also framed the challenges and struggles faced by humanity within a divine context, suggesting that these trials were part of a greater plan. This work was vital in God’s Story of Grace.

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  1. Augustine used the Latin terms peregrinus (pilgrim, wanderer, resident foreigner) and peregrinatio (pilgrimage, sojourning) extensively in his major work City of God to characterize the temporary, transient status of Christians on earth. A key expression of this is found in Book 18.1 of City of God, where he states: I also promised that I would then go on to write about the origin, the course, and the destined ends of the two cities, one of which is the city of God and the other the city of this world, in which the city of God dwells so far as its human element is concerned, but only as a pilgrim.
  2. Augustine speaks of the internal conflicts and self-contradictions which arise in the City of Man: “…the earthly city is often divided against itself by lawsuits, wars and conflicts, and by seeking. For, if any part of it rises up in war against another part, it seeks to be the victor over nations when it is itself the prisoner of its vices; and if, when it triumphs, it is puffed up with pride, its victory brings death. (Book 19, Chapter 12)
  3. This is in contrast to Jerome who declared: “when the bright light of all the world was put out, or, rather, when the Roman Empire was decapitated . . . the whole world perished in one city. Who would believe that Rome, built up by the conquest of the whole world, had collapsed, that the mother of all nations became their tomb?”
  4. Augustine’s new linear view of history is primarily developed in the second major section of The City of God, which spans Books XI through XXII. Within this larger section, the historical progression of the two cities (the Earthly City and the City of God) is specifically detailed in Books XV through XVIII. Key aspects of this linear view are demonstrated in the following areas: Book XV: Augustine begins tracing the history of the two cities from the time of Cain and Abel to the Flood, establishing the two distinct “lines” of humanity based on their love for self versus love for God. Book XVIII: This book specifically covers the parallel history of the earthly and heavenly cities from the time of Abraham up to the end of the world, contrasting the temporary rise and fall of empires (like Rome) with the continuous, purposeful progression of the City of God. The Six Ages of History: Augustine re-applies a framework of six historical ages, from Adam to the second coming of Christ, which he details in Book 23 (though most sources refer to this material being in the latter books like Book XVIII or XXII, as Book 23 doesn’t exist) to show history moving in a single, purposeful direction from Creation to the Final Judgment. 
  5. The Parable of the Wheat and Tares loomed large in Augustine’s thinking as he work through the coexistence of both cities: 24 “The kingdom of heaven is like a man who sowed good seed in his field. 25 But while everyone was sleeping, his enemy came and sowed weeds among the wheat, and went away. 26 When the wheat sprouted and formed heads, then the weeds also appeared.27 “The owner’s servants came to him and said, ‘Sir, didn’t you sow good seed in your field? Where then did the weeds come from?’28 “‘An enemy did this,’ he replied. “The servants asked him, ‘Do you want us to go and pull them up?’29 “‘No,’ he answered, ‘because while you are pulling the weeds, you may uproot the wheat with them. 30 Let both grow together until the harvest. At that time I will tell the harvesters: First collect the weeds and tie them in bundles to be burned; then gather the wheat and bring it into my barn.’” (Matthew 13:24-30)

Augustine’s Confessions: The Birth Of the Inner World (Romans 13:13-14)

Augustine’s Confessions did not influence the world with a single, thunderous strike, but through a gentle and persistent introspection that poured into the soul of Western civilization. His work could be viewed as the birth of the soul’s inner world, inviting readers to embark on their own journeys of self-discovery, which are created through God’s ongoing Story of Grace. His act of writing, which blended personal reflection on his own life with profound theological and philosophical questions, created a new form of self-examination that had never before been seen. With candid honesty, Augustine laid bare his struggles, doubts, and spiritual awakenings. The penning of this work created space, allowing others to find solace in his vulnerabilities. As the movement of Christianity was becoming bigger and wider in scope in the Roman world, at the same time it became smaller and more personalized through the writing of this groundbreaking work.

In this article, we will discuss the lasting effects of the Confessions and how it expanded our understanding of the soul, revealing important psychological insights and spiritual discoveries. As we explore Augustine’s self-examination, we will see how the Confessions not only changed individual lives but also affected the larger conversation about the meaning of God’s Story of Grace working through history.

The Journey of Augustine

The birth of the inner world

Augustine began writing Confessions around the age of 43 in 397 AD. This was not from a place of comfort but of reckoning. Hunched over a parchment, the nib of his pen scratching in the silence, he recounts his life from childhood to his conversion to Christianity. Putting aside his academic and scholarly leaning, this work is primarily the unburdening, solitary prayer addressed to God. It begins with his most famous words:

We are a mere particle in your creation, and yet you stir our hearts, so that in praising you, we find our joy. You have made us for yourself, Lord, and our hearts are restless until they rest in you.

The narrative is not a typical autobiography; instead, it is a reflective journey through his sins and struggles, a theological exploration of themes like memory, time, and creation, and an examination of his relationship with God. It offers an unprecedented glimpse into the complexities of the human psyche.

Grace and Redemption

His ability to confront the sin and brokenness of his inner life so honestly is made possible in light of Christ’s inexhaustible grace and redemption. In one memorable section, he remembered the theft of pears as a boy, a trivial sin on the surface, but a festering wound in his memory. He wrote not only of the act but of the joy he found in the forbidden nature of it—the sheer, perverse pleasure of destruction for its own sake. The shame of that small, forgotten crime burned as brightly now as it had decades ago, a signpost to the deeper, restless sickness of his soul. He details this memory as follows:

My troublemaking friends and I often stayed out late, playing games in the streets until long after dark. One night, when the games had ended, we crept out to a pear tree near my family’s vineyard. The fruit wasn’t especially appealing or tasty, but that didn’t matter to us. We shook the tree violently, laughing as we robbed it of its fruit. We gathered pears by the armful, not to eat, but to throw to the pigs. We hardly even tasted them. It wasn’t the pears we wanted; we just wanted to do something wrong, something forbidden, something we enjoyed precisely because it was despised.

He recalled the intoxicating intellectual pride of his youth, the way he had dismissed the simple wisdom of Scripture for the elegant, but empty, prose of the great Greek and Latin writers. The memory of it felt like a betrayal. He recalled the face of his mother, Monica, whose prayers had followed him like a shadow across continents, a thread of light he had tried so hard to sever. Her love was a grace he could not outrun, and now, as he wrote, he remembered the presence of her prayers following his long journey home.

The story moved toward Milan and the sermons of Bishop Ambrose, whose voice had taught Augustine to listen for the deeper truths of the biblical texts. Here he describes his encounters with the great Christian leader:

So, off I went to Milan. And that’s where I met Ambrose, the bishop. He was already known far and wide, beloved as a good man and a faithful servant of you, Lord. His eloquent sermons were like a feast for your people, giving them the nourishment of your wheat, the joy of your oil, and the sober intoxication of your wine. I didn’t know it at the time, but you were the one leading me to him, so that through him, I might be led to you. Ambrose welcomed me like a father—kind, warm, and gracious from the moment I arrived.

Conversion

The narrative reaches the famous garden scene. As he senses God coming closer to his life, he is all the more wrestling with his divided will, torn between a longing for worldly pleasure and a call to a higher life. He had heard a child’s voice chanting repeatedly, “Take up and read.” The words had driven him to the letters of the Apostle Paul, and the passage he had fixed his eyes upon struck him like a thunderclap:

Let us behave decently, as in the daytime, not in carousing and drunkenness, not in sexual immorality and debauchery, not in dissension and jealousy. Rather, clothe yourselves with the Lord Jesus Christ, and do not think about how to gratify the desires of the flesh. (Romans 13:13-14)

Recalling the impact from this reading, Augustine recounts:

My eyes landed on these words: “Not in carousing and drunkenness, not in sexual immorality and debauchery, not in dissension and jealousy. Rather, clothe yourselves with the Lord Jesus Christ, and do not think about how to gratify the desires of the flesh.” Those were the only words I read. They were all I needed. The moment I reached the end of that sentence, it felt as if a bright light suddenly snapped on inside my heart, sweeping away every shadow of doubt. I slipped a marker into the book and closed it. My heart, once storm-tossed, was now completely still.

The story of his life was only the beginning. The last chapters were an exploration of the great mysteries he now understood: the nature of time and memory, the meaning of Genesis, and the uncreated goodness of God. His mind, once a labyrinth of prideful philosophy, was now a vessel for God’s truth. He wrote for the many who would one day read it, but primarily, he wrote for God. With every word, he became less the great orator and more the small, repentant man, finding peace in the bittersweet medicine of truth. He had entered his story in his own words, and by the end, he had discovered himself within God’s Story of Grace.

The Impact of the Confessions

God’s grace moves dynamically, healing the brokenness of history. In this creative narrative, the Confessions reveals that grace is not an abstract concept, but a dynamic, historical force. Augustine wasn’t just recounting history; he was discerning its meaning. His life became a microcosm (a small example of a larger reality) of human history itself. In his own story of wandering and return, he saw the grand narrative of humanity’s journey away from and back to God. His personal conversion was not a singular event, but a participation in the greater story of redemption, showing how grace works within the fabric of time.

This is seen in the shame he once felt for his concubine and their son, Adeodatus, born out of wedlock, but now transformed by a new kind of love, a human affection now ordered by the divine grace.

My son, Adeodatus, was with us as well. He was born of my sin, and yet, Lord, you had crafted him so wonderfully. He wasn’t even fifteen, but his mind was sharper than many seasoned men. That brilliance didn’t come from me. Every good thing in him was a gift from you, the Creator who alone can take what is broken and make it whole. All I had given that boy was my sin in his conception; everything else came from your grace. You raised him in your ways, not me. You filled his young heart with a love for your discipline. And for these gifts, I thank you.

A new awareness emerged of the soul’s innermost, personal dimension. Augustine’s story demonstrates that history is not just unfolding on the wider world stage shaping events, but the drama of divine grace that is shaping and redeeming individuals, and through them, the wider world. The book’s profound legacy is that it taught the world to look inward, to see the human soul not as a static entity but as a dynamic landscape of memory, will, and grace. God is equally at work in the grand, sweeping moments of history and in the small, personal ones: in a mother’s persistent prayers, in a book found in a garden, in the quiet realization that the heart is restless until it rests in God. In Augustine, the vastness of the one trinitarian God is seen equally in the simplicity of his personal distinctions.

How Christians Built the First Hospitals (Matthew 25:40)

depiction of a hospital

In the 4th century, a kind bishop named Basil of Caesarea started a major change by creating the first real hospital, which turned informal care for the sick and poor into organized medical help. This important institution not only changed healthcare by providing systematic support but also set the stage for future hospitals, focusing on human dignity and well-being. Originally called the Basiliad (after Basil), it introduced a structured way of healthcare, allowing a variety of medical practices and granting everyone, regardless of their status, access to quality care. As a result, the Basiliad became a lasting example for hospitals today, shaping healthcare practices and inspiring future medical professionals to support those in need while promoting a broader sense of social responsibility in the community.

In this article, we shall explore how the visionary leadership of Basil not only addressed the immediate health concerns of the afflicted but also established an enduring ethic of social responsibility and communal care that echoes through history. His innovative approaches and compassionate initiatives created a network of support, fostering a sense of unity among the community members. In this context, God’s Story of Grace progressed by reintegrating the sick individuals into the well-being of the wider community. Healing came to be seen not merely as a person’s physical restoration but also as a profound social reconnection, further establishing within society the trinitarian image (Father, Son and Holy Spirit) of mutual interdependence and self-giving love.

The Dawn of an Institution: The Basiliad

Long before Basil, medical care was often limited to private homes for the wealthy or temples that excluded the terminally ill. This changed with Basil, a well-educated man and devout Christian, who was moved by the teachings of Jesus to serve the most vulnerable in society. In 369 AD, during a time of severe regional famine, he established a massive complex just outside Caesarea in Cappadocia (modern-day Turkey). He had already established soup kitchens, but he envisioned something greater: a massive complex, a “city outside the city,” dedicated to organized, compassionate care. It was his friend and fellow theologian, Gregory Nazianzus, who would call this revolutionary institution the Basiliad, after its inventor.

This wasn’t just a clinic; it was a “new city” of mercy. The Basiliad included:

  • Inpatient facilities: Wards specifically designed for the sick, the aged, and orphans, where patients receive comprehensive care and attention “around the clock.”
  • Professional medical care: A dedicated staff of physicians and nurses provided systematic treatment. Basil himself, defying social norms, bandaged the wounds of lepers, a deeply marginalized group at the time.
  • Holistic services: The complex also offered trade schools to teach occupants useful occupations, lodging for weary travelers, and spiritual care, aiming to heal the whole person—body, mind, and soul.
  • Charitable mission: Crucially, all care was provided for free, funded by church donations and challenging the self-interest prevalent in Roman society.

A Legacy Takes Root

Basil’s efforts were a radical departure from the norm and prompted a major shift in the understanding of social responsibility. He also played a key role in convincing Christians that medical science was a gift from God, not a pagan practice, thereby encouraging the integration of medical knowledge and Christian charity. Here is an excerpt from his work, Long Rules (Question 55), that captures this sentiment:

Each of the arts is God’s gift to us, remedying the deficiencies of nature… The same is true, also, of the medical art. Inasmuch as our body is susceptible to various hurts… the medical art has been vouchsafed to us by God, who directs our whole life, as a model for the cure of the soul, to guide us in the removal of what is superfluous and in the addition of what is lacking.

Basil saw medicine as one of many God-given natural means—like agriculture and weaving—intended to comfort and care for the body in a fallen world, not an act of human pride or a rejection of divine providence. 

Following his death in 379 A.D., the impact of the Basiliad was immediate and widespread.

  • Rapid Expansion: Within a century, inspired by Basil’s model, similar Christian hospitals became commonplace throughout the Byzantine world and the wider Roman Empire, significantly improving healthcare access for the less fortunate.1
  • Monastic Influence: Monasteries became centers of healing, with monks and nuns offering medical care and shelter, further embedding the hospital concept within the fabric of society.
  • Formalization of Care: Religious orders, such as the Knights Hospitaller2, later formalized this commitment, establishing hospitals across Europe and the Holy Land.

The spirit of the Basiliad, with its revolutionary combination of professional medicine, organized charity, and inpatient facilities for all, regardless of wealth, established the fundamental principles that guide modern hospitals today.

The Lasting Influence of Compassion

The Basiliad brought together the “voluntary poor” (monastics) and the “involuntary poor” (those in need) in a new kind of community that embodied Trinitarian principles of self-giving love and interdependence. This was seen in three ways:

It fostered an inclusive community. The complex included a hospital with professional staff who were dedicated to providing exceptional care to all patients, a home for the aged that offered warmth and companionship, an orphanage where the children received not just shelter but also love and education, a trade school that equipped individuals with valuable skills for their future, and guesthouses for travelers that provided comfortable accommodations and a welcoming atmosphere. This diversity of functions and residents living in close proximity mirrored the dynamic, ordered relationship of the Persons of the Trinity, illustrating how different roles and identities can coexist harmoniously while contributing to the greater good of the whole community.

It offered dignity to all. In an era where the sick, especially lepers, were outcasts, Basil personally embraced and cared for them, seeing the image of God in every suffering person. This radical affirmation of human dignity challenged the prevailing social hierarchy and emphasized the equal value of all people, just as all persons of the Trinity are of equal divinity and power.

It demonstrated love as action: The “New City” was centered around a magnificent church and focused on “love for humanity” (philanthropia). The entire structure was a physical manifestation of Christian charity, a social revolution that sought to make societal interaction reflect the harmonious, life-giving communion of the Trinity itself.

Final Thought

In essence, Basil, who was a great proponent and defender of the Trinity, put the doctrine into a concrete social blueprint, demonstrating that the nature of God as a communion of persons demands a human society characterized by communion, mutuality, and compassionate service to all members. Basil was used by God to make the words of Jesus an expanded reality:

Truly I tell you, whatever you did for one of the least of these brothers
and sisters of mine, you did for me.

Matthew 25:40

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  1. Around a century after St. Basil’s founding (c. 469 CE), hospitals inspired by his work began to spread throughout both the Eastern and Western Roman Empires. Examples of growth: The Eastern Roman Empire, under Emperor Justinian, saw the establishment of approximately 35 hospitals in Constantinople alone. Religious orders: The founding of dedicated religious orders, such as the Knights Hospitalers of Saint John, contributed to the growth of hospitals by formalizing the care of pilgrims and the sick.
  2. The order was originally a monastic and charitable one, providing care for the sick and poor, especially Christian pilgrims in the Holy Land. 

The Roots of Christmas: From Sun Worship to Son Worship  

In the Heart of Winter

In deep winter, as nights grew longest, ancient Europeans found comfort in fire, feasting, and rituals. These gatherings were often wild celebrations meant to fight off darkness and welcome the sun’s return.

Scandinavian Norse marked Yule with twelve nights of burning huge logs, believing each spark promised new life in spring. In German forests, fear of Odin riding the night sky kept many indoors. In Rome, Saturnalia flipped social order—work stopped, gambling ran free, and chaos reigned, culminating on December 25th in honor of the “Unconquered Sun” (Sol Invictus).

“The deep winter rituals were designed by God to create within the nations the ache of a longing for light and hope that is found in Jesus Christ, a brightness and warmth that never fades.”

By the fourth century, Christianity reshaped these rites. Christmas emerged, infusing pagan fear with the hope of Christ’s birth—transforming superstition into joy.

Where December 25th Really Comes From

Pagan Origins

Solstice rituals trace back millennia—evidenced by alignments at Stonehenge and Newgrange. Rome’s Saturnalia honored Saturn with feasts, while Emperor Aurelian in 274 AD declared December 25th the Birthday of the Unconquered Sun to unify the empire.

Christian Origins

Early writers like Hippolytus of Rome (c. 204 AD) calculated December 25th independently, predating Sol Invictus. The first official Roman celebration came in 336 AD (Chronography of 354). The Church co-opted the date, redirecting focus to Christ as the “light of the world” (John 8:12).

Sidebar: Historical Timeline

  • 204 AD: Hippolytus proposes December 25th via theological calculations (conception on March 25th + 9 months).
  • 274 AD: Aurelian establishes Sol Invictus festival.
  • 336 AD: First recorded Christmas in Rome.
  • 379–432 AD: Spreads to Eastern Empire, Egypt, and beyond.

Redeeming the Solstice

The Church didn’t erase pagan customs—it redeemed them:

Pagan TraditionPagan MeaningChristian Redemptive Equivalent
Date of CelebrationWinter solstice, “rebirth” of the sunBirth of Jesus, the “Light of the World”
Evergreen Trees/WreathsSymbol of eternal life and fertilityEverlasting life with Christ
Feasting and MerrimentSurvival and harvest endNativity celebration
Gift-GivingSaturnalia luck and harvestMagi’s gifts; St. Nicholas tradition
Wassailing/CarolingBanishing spirits, good healthSinging of Christ’s birth

Animal sacrifices gave way to Christ the Lamb. Drunken chaos yielded to family joy. Idol worship turned to Nativity scenes. Fear of spirits became triumph in the Light.

“His coming did not abolish the solstice; it redeemed it.”

How God Prepared Humanity

God wove natural cycles into divine foreshadowing. The solstice’s returning light mirrored Malachi 4:2:

“But for you who revere my name, the sun of righteousness will rise with healing in its rays.”

Early fathers like Ambrose and Augustine saw Christ as the true Sun outshining pagan gods. The “unconquered sun” became the Unconquered King.

“The true light that gives light to everyone was coming into the world.”
(John 1:9)

The Enduring Story

Winter’s darkness universally stirred longing for light—a prelude God used for salvation. Bonfires became Christmas lights, testifying to the true Light who stepped into our darkness.

The raw ache of humanity met its fulfillment in Christ—the desire of nations (Haggai 2:7), ending our search in unquenchable hope.

Sidebar: Early Church Voices

  • St. Ambrose: Christ as the true sun eclipsing old gods.
  • Augustine: “That day… is called the birthday of the Lord on which the Wisdom of God manifested himself as a speechless Child.”
  • De solstitia (4th century): Winter solstice as providential sign of the “Sun of Righteousness.”

Like Purim or Hanukkah—traditions beyond strict Scripture—Christmas has enriched believers for centuries, proclaiming the humility of God made flesh.