The Golden Thread
In a small stone chapel in Dover that most people walk past without a second glance, Harmonia sits with two old friends --- Edmund of Abingdon and Richard of Chichester --- and tells the story of the most misunderstood document in history. Magna Carta was not a noble gift freely given. It was a feudal bargain struck under duress, annulled within months, reissued for convenience, and apparently dead before it had barely drawn breath. What kept it alive was not inevitability or the arc of history bending on its own --- it was specific people, in specific moments, willing to stand for a principle they could not yet fully see. Edmund of Abingdon was one of those people. A scholar and mystic who never wanted power, appointed Archbishop of Canterbury against his will, who stood before a king and threatened excommunication over a piece of parchment that would eventually seed the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. He failed in almost every institutional sense. The thread held anyway. This is a story about moral courage, the slow erosion of principle, and the stubborn human habit of picking up the brush and repainting the wall. Read the transcript [https://harmonia.email/podcast-episode/weight-promise-edmund-abingdon-and-magna-carta] Share and read comments. [https://harmonia.email/podcast-comments?field_podcast_feed_value=the_golden_thread&from_node=336]
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