After His ascension, Christ left His Spirit to instruct us until His Second Coming. Thurston Quinch, an unsuspecting existential phenomenologist, claims to have been struck by some of this lighteningthough he clarifies the Spirit insists to manifest materially to all of us, but in degrees from simple fleshly responses to theatrical experiences up to that elusive intimate internal knowing the saints have written about. Quinton's prophesy, presented chronologically, offers a radical, at times seemingly blasphemous, alternative to the way Christianity is commonly understood.
His premise is that the Spiritwhom he began to call Supernature when he first perceived it as a mere supernatural phenomenonis calling for a gleaning of the original truth out of the clutter of original rhetoric and mythological distortions. The truth will come out! Quinch unapologetically opposes what he considers pagan corruption by even modern relativism of the one, true faith.
Thurston Quinch publishes his religious works under what he calls his punny sixteenth-century pen name. He has written several unpublished manuscripts on the present subject, while simultaneously attending both Protestant and Catholic churches. His work, L’Histoire de St. Jeanne D’Arc: Lessons on Supernature was completed in April, 2000. He currently lives in Southern Illinois.