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Signs and Mysteries: Revealing Ancient Christian Symbols

This past spring my wife (an artist) and I taught an eight week class on Christian symbolism. Trying to get a handle on early church symbols on turned to Signs and Mysteries: Revealing Ancient Christian Symbols by Mike Aquilina. It is a fascinating quick tour through the symbols of the very early church. And if you are at all interested in Christian symbolism or the history of the early church I highly recommend it.

Here is the publishers synopsis:

Imagine the dangerous life of a First Century Christian. You’ve embraced your new found faith in Christ but fear the risk of persecution or death at the hands of the pagans living around you. Then a trusted friend tells you about some of Jesus followers who secretly meet. He whispers into your ear, Look for a fish carved into the entrance way to the burial chambers beside the Via Tiburtina. You smile in gratitude.

Comparatively, modern society is awash in those same Christian symbols that kept early Christians safely connected: they appear on churches, bumper stickers, mugs even mints and stuffed animals. Yet, we are often ignorant of the origins of these symbols having lost the urgency of our spiritual ancestors hostile environment.

Noted author Mike Aquilina conducts an intriguing tour of symbols that guided the first four centuries of the Church s existence. He explains how Christians borrowed pagan and Jewish symbols, giving them new, distinctly Christian meanings. Recover the voice and urgency of our spiritual ancestors symbolic language and discover the impact the symbols still have.

Black and white illustrations by Lea Ravotti of artifacts uncovered throughout the Middle East beautifully complement the text, showing the variety of contexts in which they were found and the range of skills displayed in their execution.

Besides the obvious introduction to the basic symbols of the church in its infancy, what the book gives the readers is a greatr insight into the circumstances and cultural and spiritual perspective of the nascent body of believers. It shows you their focus and their spiritual and psychological needs.

A couple of things that struck me. One I never really thought about the cross not coming until later in church history. The fish and other Christogrpahs came first and dominated the early church.  Also, the early church was focused on Communion and the Eucharist in ways we simply are not today. They seem to have had this holistic view where the bread and wine symbolized both the provision of God in their daily lives but also the spiritual life they he had provided for them.  This tied back into the centrality of the church as a place where nourishment and life was to be found. Believers could not live spiritually without Christ and the church was the place where that connection was made and nurtured. The communion table was a powerful symbol of the relationship of both the believer to Christ and the church to the believer and of the centrality of God in all of life.

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In the Mail: Now in the sidebar

Just thought I would make the publishers and publicists who might read this humble blog aware that the “In the Mail” entries are now over in the sidebar on the right hand side (just under recent posts).

I think this is a handy way to showcase the books that come my way, but that I might not have a chance to review, without taking up a full blow post of its own.

And to be honest I am drowning in books and so don’t need to ingratiate myself with publishers quite as much as I used to …

PSA: Theme changes

In a seeming case of Murphy’s law just when I had found a theme I really liked I ran into a problem.

The previous theme had the featured post slideshow setup I really liked but I couldn’t get the stats tracking services to work. This might seems like a small price to pay for a nice, and free, theme but it was one of those things that really got under my skin because I couldn’t understand why it wasn’t working.

So I switched back to this theme to verify that the theme was the problem. And sure enough, as soon as I switched to a different theme the stats plugins started tracking traffic again.

Just thought I would make a note of this for informational purposes and in case there were any technical folks reading this who might be interested in helping me solve this problem.

The better is the enemy of the good

The first step is admitting you have a problem, right? OK, I am Kevin Holtsberry and I am obsessed with WordPress themes. I just can’t seem to settle on a theme that I like and that doesn’t eventually bug me to the point of changing it and spending hours trying to figure out what I want to do.

Perceptive regular readers (who knows if I have any of those left) will have noticed I once again have been mucking about with the themes around here.  I had thought to go with a more “magazine” style theme since I posted less often and mostly just reviews and “In the Mail.” Bit for a variety of reason I never really like the theme even though I like the idea of a front page with book covers to tempt you into reading more reviews.

I toyed with using Tumblr to “blog” and offering more formal type reviews here but ultimately decided against that idea. Partly, because the fancy magazine themes require skill with code and images that I lack (and book cover are tall and narrow rather than the short and wide image locations so many seem to feature).

I want to try to write more, and more thoughtfully, and one way to do that is to blog more about what I read – the content as I am reading – rather than just post reviews. So a more traditional blog look would match that focus.

So here we are with yet another theme and layout. FYI, the five latest reviews will scroll across the top while the rest will fall in reverse chronological as befitting a blog.

Sorry for any inconvenience and I hope you like the new layout. Carry on.

*Ten points for the person who names the author of the phrase used for the post title without Google …

Public Service Announcement: reviews coming soon

Just for the record, new job and a big project has kept me from posting regular reviews.  Plan is to start catching up tomorrow.  I have fiction and non-fiction to review so stayed tuned.

We now return you to your regularly scheduled programming.