The post you are reporting:
So you read it, Paul! That's the one I am studying, got it for three weeks, it's a gold-mine of informatiom, and the real clue to it all is that the said Reverend was allowed by the Minister of War to carry out an examination of the foundations during and after their clearence from centuries of debris, and prior to restoration.
Thus he, and the group of archaeologists working with him, came to conclusions based on historic and archaeological knowledge, that would be hard to ascertain now without breaking the masonery. Having studied the Church's foundations, as well as the masonery standing on the foundations, he gives a light that is different to the semi-official version concerning this same Church.
This kind of study is that what I love doing, researching into Church foundations!
i also found that the author has the same ideas as I don in many aspects concerning Religion and the origins of the English Church, of which I wrote an article on Suite 101. He also writes about the British Church prior to the English, and exactly on this I had intended carrying out my next research, and so I doubly find his book interesting!
This Church, to all forumites interested, is unique in Britain!