|
Showing 1 - 4 of
4 matches in All Departments
In this book, a group of prominent scholar-teachers meditate on how
to read, in the context of a specifically Christian university or
college education, some of the greatest texts of the Western
tradition. Each author devotes himself or herself to a single text.
In many cases, the authors have been reading, rereading, marking,
ruminating, inwardly digesting, teaching, and discussing their text
for several decades, so that they offer here a distillation of
years of familiarity and reflection. The texts span nearly 3,000
years. They are pre-Christian, Christian, and post-Christian. Each
kind of text - indeed, each individual text - offers its own
special opportunities and challenges for Christian interpretation.
From these diverse readings emerges a sense that these texts all
belong to a single great tradition, one to which Christianity made
and continues to make enormous contributions. Medieval Christian
writers exploit and transform pagan texts, and post-Christian
writers like Nietzsche and Joyce are often preoccupied with
Christian themes. In one way or another all the texts are about
what it is to be a human being and what a good human life might
look like. Thus "common threads" bind one text to the next,
creating countless resonances among them. The authors of the essays
in this book all address the question, "How shall we read these
texts from the vantage point of faith in God and Jesus Christ?
Moreover, how shall we read them as members of a community with a
common vision of the human good, aiming to nurture our students in
that vision by reading with them some of the profoundest and most
delightful things the human hand has penned?" As the Introduction
suggests, the volume hopes to contribute to a renewal of the
original intention of university education: to cultivate minds and
hearts formed and informed by wisdom, the highest of intellectual
goods.
|
|