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Paul's Visual Piety - The Metamorphosis of the Beholder (Hardcover)
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Paul's Visual Piety - The Metamorphosis of the Beholder (Hardcover)
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This book is at the interface between Visual Studies and Biblical
Studies. For several decades, scholars of visuality have been
uncovering the significance of everyday visual practices, in the
sense of learnt habits of viewing and the assumptions that underpin
them. They have shown that these play a key role in forming and
maintaining relationships in religious devotion and in social life.
The "Visual Studies" movement brought issues such as these to the
attention of most humanities disciplines by the end of the
twentieth century, but until very recently made little impact on
Biblical Studies. The explanation for this "disciplinary
blind-spot" lies partly in the reception of St Paul, who became
Augustine's inspiration for platonising denigration of the material
world, and Luther's for faith through "scripture alone." In the
hands of more radical Reformers, the Word was soon vehemently
opposed to the Image, an emphasis that was further fostered in the
philologically-inclined university faculties where Biblical Studies
developed.
Yet Paul's piety is visual as well as verbal, even aside from his
mystical visions. He envisages a contemplative focus on certain
this-worldly sights as an integral part of believers' metamorphosis
into Christ-likeness. This theme runs through Romans, but finds its
most concise expression in his correspondence with the Corinthians:
"We all, with unveiled face, beholding in a mirror the glory of the
Lord, are being metamorphosed into the same image, from glory to
glory, as from the Lord, the Spirit" (2 Cor 3:18). Richly ambiguous
and allegorical as this is, Paul shortly afterward defines an
earthly site where this transformative, sacred gaze occurs. He
insists that not mere death, but the death of Jesus is 'made
manifest' in his suffering apostolic flesh. Rightly perceived, this
becomes a holy spectacle for the sacred gaze, working life in those
who behold in faith, but undoing those who see but do not perceive.
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