Johannes Kepler — "I have been a wanderer, but I have always found my way back to God."
I have been a wanderer, but I have always found my way back to God.
I have been a wanderer, but I have always found my way back to God.
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"Mathematics is the alphabet with which God has written the universe."
"I am a Lutheran astrologer, I throw away the nonsense and keep the hard kernel."
"Repudiating the sensible world, which he neither sees himself nor believes from those who have, the Peripatetic joins combat by childish quibbling in a world on paper, and denies the Sun shines becaus…"
"I have often been in danger, but God has always protected me."
"I have often been poor, but I have always been rich in spirit."
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The speaker admits to straying from their spiritual path at various points in life, exploring different ideas, doubts, or directions. Despite these detours, they consistently return to faith in God as their anchor. It acknowledges that belief is not always a straight line but can involve questioning and drift, while affirming that divine connection remains the ultimate destination regardless of how far one roams.
Kepler's life embodied this tension between rigorous scientific inquiry and devout Lutheran faith. He pursued heretical Copernican heliocentrism, clashed with religious authorities, and had his mother tried for witchcraft, yet viewed astronomy as 'thinking God's thoughts after him.' His planetary laws emerged from a conviction that geometric harmony in the cosmos revealed divine design, making science itself a path back to God.
The early modern period (late 1500s-early 1600s) was defined by the Scientific Revolution colliding with the Protestant Reformation and Counter-Reformation. The Thirty Years' War ravaged Europe over religious divisions, Galileo faced the Inquisition, and thinkers navigated dangerous territory between emerging empirical science and entrenched theology. Personal faith statements carried real weight, as scholars like Kepler needed to reconcile radical cosmic discoveries with orthodox belief to survive.
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