Tag Archives: A S Neill

The Gospels Before Doctrine: Memory, Psychology, and the Loss of the Inward Way

A reflection on the psychological genius of the Gospel writers — not as supernatural scribes, but as master interpreters of Jewish symbolism and human interior life. This essay explores how living insight hardened into doctrine, how resurrection reshaped Christianity’s centre of gravity, and why the Gospels still endure as a call to inward transformation rather than metaphysical certainty.

On Reality

A closing reflection on where real quality lies — not in ideas or rhetoric, but in how we live. Drawing on the thought that genuine change comes from people who remain true to themselves, this piece argues that moral integrity precedes theory. Against collapsing narratives and technocratic hopes, it affirms the quiet power of natural goodness expressed through action.