The well-worn saying about being condemned to repeat the
history we do not know applies to church history as much as to any other kind.
But how are Christians supposed to discern what lessons from history need to be
learned?
In this small but thoughtful volume, respected theologian and churchman Rowan
Williams opens up a theological approach to history, and approach that is both
nonpartisan and relevant to the church’s present needs. As he reflects on how
we consider the past in general, Williams suggests that how we consider church
history in particular remains important not so much for winning arguments as
for clarifying who we are as time-bound human beings. Good history is a moral
affair, he advises, because it opens up a point of reference that is distinct from
us yet not wholly alien. The past can then enable us to think with more varied
and resourceful analogies about our identity in the often confusing present.