Rosenstock-Huessy again: He writes that Christian conversion always involves a break with an old way of life, a breach with old loyalties and commitments, and a "verification" of that experience by an induction into a new people, "formerly overlooked or even despised, who now enable us to strengthen experience into habit." (There's a bit too much of Weber in that formulation, but leave that to the side.) In a footnote, he adds: "America was practical Christianity as lon as millions of immigrants experienced a change of allegiance from an Old World to a New World, as long as tears shed in the Old World backed up as seed the harvest of joyful experiences in the New."
posted by Peter J. Leithart on Wednesday, January 03, 2007 at 03:08 PM
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