The Anno Domini Defended
The 1,500-Year Christian Legacy of Time
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Narrado por:
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Virtual Voice
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De:
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C.F. Dalton
Este título utiliza narración de voz virtual
For over fifteen centuries, the calendar that governs our lives has borne an unmistakable Christian imprint. From the monk Dionysius Exiguus in AD 525, who numbered years from the Incarnation of Jesus Christ to replace a persecutor's era, to Pope Gregory XIII's groundbreaking reform in 1582 that perfected the solar year for accurate Easter dating, the system we call the Gregorian calendar is a profound achievement of Christian scholarship, devotion, and persistence.
Anno Domini Defended traces this remarkable history: the Julian calendar's drift and its disruption of Easter; the Church's centuries-long efforts to align time with liturgy; the pivotal roles of figures like the Venerable Bede, who popularized AD/BC notation; and the gradual, often contentious adoption across nations and denominations until near-universal acceptance by the early 20th century. By the year 2000—a leap year perfectly handled by Gregorian rules—the calendar had proven its precision, with drift of just one day every 3,300 years.
Yet in recent decades, a quiet rebranding has taken hold: BCE/CE ("Before/Common Era") replaces BC/AD, retaining the exact same numbering and Christ-centered pivot while stripping away any explicit acknowledgment of its origins. This change is not neutrality—it is the Christian era renamed, a cosmetic shift that obscures the faith that motivated its creators without correcting any factual inaccuracy.
In this concise yet thorough defense, Anno Domini Defended makes the case for historical honesty: the calendar's structure and epoch were forged by monks, priests, astronomers, and popes to honor Christ and unify Christian worship. To pretend otherwise dishonors their legacy and the religious roots that shaped global timekeeping. If true secular neutrality is desired, a completely new system is needed—not a euphemistic overlay.
Whether you're a historian, theologian, educator, or simply someone who values intellectual integrity, this book offers a clear, evidence-based argument for retaining BC/AD. Time itself tells a story—don't let it be rewritten.