Doubting Thomas

Doubting Thomas

by Glenn W. Most
Doubting Thomas

Doubting Thomas

by Glenn W. Most

eBook

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Overview

About the disciple known as Doubting Thomas, everyone knows at least this much: he stuck his finger into the risen Jesus’ wounds. Or did he? A fresh look at the Gospel of John reveals how little we may really understand about this most perplexing of biblical figures, and how much we might learn from the strange twists and turns Thomas’s story has taken over time.

From the New Testament, Glenn W. Most traces Thomas’s permutations through the centuries: as Gnostic saint, missionary to India, paragon of Christian orthodoxy, hero of skepticism, and negative example of doubt, blasphemy, stupidity, and violence. Rife with paradoxes and tensions, these creative transformations at the hands of storytellers, theologians, and artists tell us a great deal about the complex relations between texts and their interpretations—and about faith, love, personal identity, the body, and twins, among other matters.

Doubting Thomas begins with a close reading of chapter 20 of the Gospel of John, set against the conclusions of the other Gospels, and ends with a detailed analysis of the painting of this subject by Caravaggio, setting it within the pictorial traditions of late antiquity, the Middle Ages, and the Renaissance. Along the way, Most considers narrative reactions to John’s account by storytellers of various religious persuasions, and Christian theologians’ interpretations of John 20 from the second century ad until the Counter-Reformation. His work shows how Thomas’s story, in its many guises, touches upon central questions of religion, philosophy, hermeneutics, and, not least, life.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780674266179
Publisher: Harvard University Press
Publication date: 09/30/2007
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 288
File size: 6 MB

About the Author

Glenn W. Most is Visiting Professor on the Committee on Social Thought at the University of Chicago.

Table of Contents

Contents Preface List of Abbreviations I. THE TEXTUAL BASIS Seeing and Believing Before Thomas: The Synoptic Gospels Believing and Touching: The Gospel of John Touching a God II. RESPONSES AND DEVELOPMENTS Sources and Reflections Narrative Developments: The Apocrypha and Beyond Exegetical Reactions: From the Church Fathers to the Counter-Reformation Pictorial Versions: Thomas in Sacred Images The Holy Finger Afterword Bibliographical Essays Illustration Credits Indexes

What People are Saying About This

The nature of belief, its relation to seeing and to touching, is at the center of this fascinating and strikingly lucid account of the problematic New Testament figure of Thomas, better known as Doubting Thomas. Whether exploring the vexing ambiguities in Chapter 20 of the Gospel of John or the subtle differences in the iconography of their representation from the Middle Ages to Caravaggio in the late Renaissance, Glenn Most is always insightful, illuminating, engaging. This is a terrific book.

John O'Malley

an intriguing book that explores a number of issues that go beyond its immediate subject.
John O'Malley, author of Four Cultures of the West

Anthony Grafton

Glenn Most takes us on a magical mystery tour through two millennia of Doubting Thomas's afterlife. This artful and erudite book illuminates a vast range of texts, commentaries, and paintings. Provocative, minutely observant, and compulsively readable, this study sets a new standard for what it means to study the reception of any passage in a canonical book.
Anthony Grafton, author of The Footnote: A Curious History

Mark Strand

The nature of belief, its relation to seeing and to touching, is at the center of this fascinating and strikingly lucid account of the problematic New Testament figure of Thomas, better known as Doubting Thomas. Whether exploring the vexing ambiguities in Chapter 20 of the Gospel of John or the subtle differences in the iconography of their representation from the Middle Ages to Caravaggio in the late Renaissance, Glenn Most is always insightful, illuminating, engaging. This is a terrific book.

Ronald Cameron

In weaving a narrative of the cultural history of reception and transmission of one of the most arresting, and misunderstood, pericopes in the New Testament, the author provides the reader with a lively analytical study of central questions of faith and doubt, skepticism and persuasion synchronically and diachronically. I don't know of another book quite like this one. It's well-written, in a lively, learned style and is a genuine pleasure to read.
Ronald Cameron, author Redescribing Christian Origins

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