Audiolibro: Europe and the Faith
- Download Section 01 Introduction audio
- Download Section 02 Introduction (cont.) audio
- Download Section 03 Introduction (concluded) audio
- Download Section 04 Chapter 1 audio
- Download Section 05 Chapter 1 (cont) audio
- Download Section 06 Chapter 1 (concluded) audio
- Download Section 07 Chapter 2 audio
- Download Section 08 Chapter 2 (cont) audio
- Download Section 09 Chapter 2 (cont) audio
- Download Section 10 Chapter 2 (Concluded) audio
- Download Section 11 Chapter 3 audio
- Download Section 12 Chapter 3 (cont.) audio
- Download Section 13 Chapter 3 (cont) audio
- Download Section 14 Chapter 3 (Concluded) audio
- Download Section 15 Chapter 4 audio
- Download Section 16 Chapter 4 (cont) audio
- Download Section 17 Chapter 4 (cont.) audio
- Download Section 18 Chapter 4 (concluded) audio
- Download Section 19 Chapter 5 audio
- Download Section 20 Chapter 5 (cont.) audio
- Download Section 21 Chapter 5 (cont.) audio
- Download Section 22 Chapter 5 (cont.) audio
- Download Section 23 Chapter 5 (cont.) audio
- Download Section 24 Chapter 5 (cont.) audio
- Download Section 25 Chapter 5 (concluded) audio
- Download Section 26 Chapter 6 audio
- Download Section 27 Chapter 6 (cont.) audio
- Download Section 28 Chapter 6 (concluded) audio
- Download Section 29 Chapter 7 audio
- Download Section 30 Chapter 7 (concluded) audio
- Download Section 31 Chapter 8 audio
- Download Section 32 Chapter 8 (concluded) audio
- Download Section 33 Chapter 9 audio
- Download Section 34 Chapter 9 (cont.) audio
- Download Section 35 Chapter 9 (cont.) audio
- Download Section 36 Chapter 9 (concluded) audio
- Download Section 37 Chapter 10 audio
- Download Section 38 Chapter 10 (concluded) audio
Géneros de audiolibros
Autor
Descripción
The Catholic brings to history (when I say "history" in these pages I mean the history of Christendom) self-knowledge. As a man in the confessional accuses himself of what he knows to be true and what other people cannot judge, so a Catholic, talking of the united European civilization, when he blames it, blames it for motives and for acts which are his own. He himself could have done those things in person. He is not relatively right in his blame, he is absolutely right. As a man can testify to his own motive so can the Catholic testify to unjust, irrelevant, or ignorant conceptions of the European story; for he knows why and how it proceeded. Others, not Catholic, look upon the story of Europe externally as strangers. "They" have to deal with something which presents itself to them partially and disconnectedly, by its phenomena alone: "he" sees it all from its centre in its essence, and together. (Hilaire Belloc)
¿Te gustó lo que escuchaste? ¡Compártelo con tus amigos y familiares!.