Christianity began as fluid storytelling, not as a system of rules. Yet within four centuries, oral traditions hardened into authoritative texts used to define doctrine, regulate behaviour, and support imperial power. This essay traces how the Gospels moved from living memories of Jesus to instruments of governance, shaping the Church and the civilisation built around it.
A critical yet sympathetic exploration of the Bible as a multi-voiced historical library, from Covenant and exile to Jesus and Paul, Constantine, and modern secular collapse — concluding that Scripture still offers profound value when read metaphorically as a mirror of the human psyche rather than a literal divine manual.


