Many,
many years ago my husband and I "discovered" a Scriptorium in Grand
Haven, Michigan, kind of tucked away in an unassuming spot. Yesterday, I
pulled out a "bulletin" from our visit that I had put aside because of
the wonderful articles in it.
Here's
a bit of trivia . . . among the Van Kampen Collection at the
Scriptorium was the "first Bible printed in America." Interestingly,
that first Bible was printed in Algonquin, not English.
I
would encourage you to look up the history of the Eliot Bible online;
it's fascinating. The collection, which had a variety of many amazing
artifacts, is no longer housed where we saw it, nor available to the
public, as far as I can tell.
The
article offers a quote by Nathaniel Hawthorne in tribute to John Eliot,
since it was Eliot who worked so hard to see that the Algonquins had a
bible translated in their language.
Even though, according to the article, Hawthorne was not a fan of the Puritans, he wrote of Eliot:
"It is good for the world that such a man has lived."
Now whether or not you agree with Hawthorne, or the need for such a bible, it is a great quote.
I mean, who might you know that this could be said about?
Janet Cassidy
janetcassidy.com
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