A retelling of twenty foundational Greek myths, read not as entertaining fables but as early attempts to understand the origins of civilisation itself. From chaos and creation to law, hubris, restraint, and social order, these stories reveal how ancient cultures grappled with power, responsibility, and the fragile balance between destruction and meaning. Read alongside parallel narratives from the Bible, they suggest that the struggle to build and preserve civilisation is a shared human concern — one that transcends time, religion, and geography.
Modern evangelicalism is not an ancient faith but a twentieth-century invention. Born in the anxiety of 1930s America, it fused personal emotion, mass media, and nationalism into a new religious identity. What began as revival became a system of control — replacing faith as awareness with belief as submission.
