This important, wide-ranging book examines how Palestine became a Holy Land to Christians and how their ideas and feelings toward the land of the Bible evolved as Christians lived there and made it their own. Robert L. Wilken traces the Christian conception of a Holy Land from its origins in the Hebrew Bible to the Muslim conquest of Jerusalem in the seventh century and also discusses how Jews responded to the Christianization of the Land of Israel.
A wonderful book on how Palestine became "the holy land" first for Jews, then for Christians. Great insights and important information for the Christian community to understand who they are, where they come from and what it really means to remain steadfast in their "homeland".
"The idea of the Christian Holy Land was largely the work of those who resided in Palestine."
From the time of Jesus, Palestine has been an integral part of the Christian experience. Not only have Christians always lived in Palestine, but since the fourth century, Christians gradually came to see Palestine as the Holy Land and Jerusalem as the Christian city. In 'The Land Called Holy', Robert Wilken discusses how Palestine became a Holy Land to Christians and how Christian ideas and feelings toward the land of the Bible evolved as they lived there and made it their own.
An interesting scholarly work that typically makes for slower processing, this was as much a read for personal interest as for (yet another) layer of context on early Christianity and late antiquity that figure in my next historical fiction book.