Christopher Dawson (1889-1970), Catholic convert and eminent historian of culture, despised the tripartite division of both secular and ecclesiastical history into early, medieval, and modern periods. For the Church’s history, by his erudite reckoning, there are six ages, each lasting three or four centuries. “Each of them begins, and end, in crisis,” he writes in one of his final books, The Historic Reality of Christian Culture.
From the crisis point, each age, except the first, spanning from Pentecost to Constantine’s conversion, passes through three phases of growth and then decay: intense spiritual activity and birth of new apostolates, achievements in the Church and in culture, assaults from enemies inside and outside the Church that depreciate or destroy these achievements.
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