Here I Walk: A Thousand Miles On Foot To Rome with Martin Luther by Andrew L. Wilson intrigued me after hearing the author talk about the pilgrimage he and his wife, Sarah, took in 2010. They started out from Erfurt, Germany, only to find out later that Luther left on his journey from Wittenberg. They thought they would commemorate this event exactly 500 years later, but more recent research showed they were off by a year. They hoped to follow in his footsteps, or at least walk some of the same route. This happened occasionally, and I was surprised they could walk through forests and fields on trails that have been preserved for pilgrims throughout the centuries. But the super highways and urban sprawl posed difficult and sometimes dangerous decisions. And of course there were the challenges of rain and snow that came with seasonal change.
On the positive side, they met and were helped by caring and colorful people all along the way. They saw remnants of antiquity in churches and monasteries that have been built and rebuilt to fit the aesthetic of the time. They saw harvests of grains and grapes that have continued to sustain the populace through centuries of farming. The author's daily observations and musings invited the reader to join the experience of the long walk.
"From the Other Pair of Feet" was Sarah Hinlicky Wilson's contribution at the end of the book. In a personal and refreshing style she shared her reflections of the trip. She also summarized the depth of the book's content with the following sentence: "In these pages Andrew has offered to you the spiritual, theological, historical, and ecumenical significance of Luther en route to Rome, the ensuing split, and the recent efforts at repair."