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A History Podcast of the Christian Church told through the lives and thoughts of its greatest thinkers.
Anselm of Canterbury Part One.
There are moments in church history when the Christian faith is forced to answer difficult questions.
Not questions of persecution or survival, but questions of understanding. Questions that arise when thoughtful believers begin to ask what it means to believe, and whether faith can be explained? Questions like, can the truths of the gospel even be understood by the human mind, and if God has revealed Himself, how can we seek to understand that revelation more deeply with our limited human understanding?
In the centuries after the fall of the Western Roman Empire, much of Europe struggled through what historians often call the Dark Ages. Learning had declined. Political order had fractured, and much of the intellectual life that had once shaped the ancient world seemed to be fading into the shadows.
But faith remained.
In our last episode, we encountered John Scotus Erigena, a remarkable thinker who attempted to bring together philosophy and theology boldly and imaginatively. John Erigena reminded us that Christianity has never been afraid of deep thinking — but his speculative approach also revealed the dangers of letting philosophy wander too far from the clear anchor of biblical revelation. But now, as we move further into the medieval world, we encounter a very different kind of thinker. Not a court philosopher or a speculative mystic this time, but a monk. A man who believed that theology must begin not with an intellectual argument, but with prayer.
This man was Anselm of Canterbury....
No transcript available for this episode.

The History of the Christian Church - 2000 Years of Christian Thought.

The History of the Christian Church - 2000 Years of Christian Thought.

The History of the Christian Church - 2000 Years of Christian Thought.