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Showing 1 - 17 of
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Arachne (Paperback)
Amos N Wilder
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R409
R345
Discovery Miles 3 450
Save R64 (16%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Description: We live in a world that calls for the separation of
church and state, and the separation of religion and the arts is of
a piece with this divided culture. However, this long-standing
breach between Christianity and the arts narrows in view of the
notable development of mutual interest and conversation between
theology and literature. Dr. Wilder discusses this historic
cleavage and then sets forth, first from the side of imaginative
literature and then from the side of the church, the evidence for
an emerging bridge of this gulf. The most significant arts of our
time have dealt with metaphysical and moral themes as well as
existential concerns by drawing on the great religious mythical
patterns of the past. Yet the church, in many respects, has become
conscious of its aesthetic shortcomings and is increasingly aware
of the modern arts. Dr. Wilder discusses the basic dilemma of
Christianity's relationship to the aesthetic order of experience,
emphasizing that religious art and symbols should not be viewed as
merely decoration, but rather as bearers of meaning and truth and
therefore as critically important to the religious tradition. Dr.
Wilder examines particular examples of the treatment of religious
subject matter in modern works by Jeffers and Faulkner. He reflects
on Jeffers' adequate and inadequate views of the central Christian
theme of vicarious atonement, and takes Faulkner's The Sound and
the Fury as opportunity for consideration of the attenuation of
Christian culture. The book aims to inform readers interested in
modern literature and the arts of relevant developments in church
circles that may both surprise and gratify, even as it introduces
churchmen and theologians to features of modern writing that very
much concern them.
Description: The graphic artist Margaret Rigg met Amos Wilder
through The Society for Arts, Religion and Contemporary Culture
(ARC), of which Wilder, together with such figures as Joseph
Campbell and Paul Tillich, was a founder in the early 1960s. In
1978 Rigg published Imagining the Real, a limited edition (350
copies with designs) as an expression of ""homage"" to Wilder with
a special emphasis on his poetry. This unusual publication includes
an extensive interview between Rigg and Wilder covering his
upbringing and its influence on his life as a writer and poet; an
original essay by Wilder on themes suggested by the interview (""A
Comment . . .""); six poems by Wilder selected to depict shifting
sensibilities over his six-decades-long career as a practicing
poet; and a lively self-annotated overview of his life and career
(""Wilderiana: Dates and Places""). The volume concludes with poems
dedicated to Wilder by Stanley Romaine Hopper and Arnold Kenseth.
Long known only to students of Amos Wilder and his family, the
republication of Imagining the Real makes available to a broader
public an unusual window on the story of Amos Wilder, poet.
Description: In Modern Poetry and the Christian Tradition, Wildler
examines this movement in poetry in relation to the direction in
which our culture is moving. He interprets the significance of
modern poetry and shows its relation to the ""traditional."" He
gives attention to the representative poets of our time (including
Dylan Thomas, Gerard Manley Hopkins, Allen Tate, W. H. Auden,
Wallace Stevens, T. S. Eliot and others); he notes the wider
implications of their work and assesses from them the impulses and
trends of our age. As a poet of considerable ability, as a student
of literary criticism for many years, and as a teacher, Wilder is
in a position to know and understand his subject. The result is a
book of permanent value to all concerned with the deeper meanings
of civilization and Christianity.
Description: "The one great and telling charge made against
Christian religion in the modern period," writes Amos Wilder, "is
that it is otherworldly, escapist and irrelevant to the problems of
life." There is a good deal of truth in this charge, Dr. Wilder
feels--whether we look at Catholicism or Protestantism, orthodoxy
or liberalism. Christianity, in one way or another, has given the
impression of being mainly concerned with the next world or with
private religious experiences, to the neglect of the needs of men
in everyday life. Here is an answer to the charge. Our common human
experience, Dr. Wilder shows, cannot be cut off from its
transcendent aspects, but neither can it be cut off from the
pressing needs of life here and now. Dr. Wilder goes into biblical
history for his answer. Jesus spoke directly to the social dilemmas
of his people. The power of the Gospel in the Roman Empire had much
to do with the answer it supplied to the social and cultural
cravings of that age. Recent trends in New Testament study exhibit
the attacks made then, as now, on false spirituality and
theological obscurantism. This is a stirring and impressively
documented call to application of the Gospel, to the practical and
secular problems of men. Otherworldliness and the New Testament is
alive with flashing insights into a crucial modern theological
problem. But it does much more in apprising both the serious
thinker and the casual reader of the tangled strands of a complex
situation in religious interpretation, as it relates to the arts,
to social justice, to religious education, and to many diverse
fields.
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Grace Confounding (Paperback)
Amos N Wilder; Foreword by Peter Hawkins
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R333
R280
Discovery Miles 2 800
Save R53 (16%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Description: What was the faith behind the proclamations of Jesus,
the message of Paul, and the Johannine witness--and how can it be
recovered today? This penetrating and provocative book seeks to
probe the various formulations of religious faith in the New
Testament with a view to recovering the real essence and genius of
Christianity today. Dr. Wilder sees three principal strains--often
harmonious but sometimes disparate--in New Testament faith: the
proclamations of Jesus, the message of Paul, and the witness of
John the Evangelist. First, he studies what has happened to our
faith since its original message emerged from the concrete
historical act and the resultant community of experience. In the
time since, flesh and spirit, as well as humanity and divinity,
have come to be regarded as mutually exclusive, making it necessary
for scientific humanism to develop a language of its own--for
religion has lost communication with it. Jesus' message, however,
was a total claim and a total hope, a prophetic forecast of human
destiny. Paul, though he spoke a different language and used
different symbols, laid the groundwork for an epochal revolution of
the race. John, for his part, emphasized eternal life here and now
and previsioned a Christian freedom. Dr. Wilder ends with a
stirring plea for a postliberal viewpoint that will recover the
insights of the past without its mythology and terminology.
Description: An illuminating New Testament study depicts the power
and beauty of language that speaks with the words of God and man.
Words call man to battle or summon him to prayer. More and more,
today man is analyzing his language and asking: What is the purpose
of language? What do the words we speak mean? What is their
religious significance? Dr. Wilder's extraordinary work attempts to
answer these questions and, in particular, to study the qualities
of the language that ushered in a new religion, the early Christian
faith.
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