Under the Gaze of the Bible
Chretien's essays on reading sacred scripture are enriched by his immersion in the classics of ancient philosophy and theology, as well as his poetic sensibility. He is as likely to quote Claudel as Aquinas or Origen. His intimate acquaintance with Patristic writings combines with a sympathetic understanding of such Protestant sources as Luther, Calvin, and Barth to yield an admirably ecumenical perspective.

The book's title refers to James 1:23-24, which portrays the Word of God as a mirror into which one gazes. The concomitant notion of not only examining the text but also being examined by the Word is a fruitful one for learning how to be more fully nourished by one's study of the Bible.
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Under the Gaze of the Bible
Chretien's essays on reading sacred scripture are enriched by his immersion in the classics of ancient philosophy and theology, as well as his poetic sensibility. He is as likely to quote Claudel as Aquinas or Origen. His intimate acquaintance with Patristic writings combines with a sympathetic understanding of such Protestant sources as Luther, Calvin, and Barth to yield an admirably ecumenical perspective.

The book's title refers to James 1:23-24, which portrays the Word of God as a mirror into which one gazes. The concomitant notion of not only examining the text but also being examined by the Word is a fruitful one for learning how to be more fully nourished by one's study of the Bible.
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Under the Gaze of the Bible

Under the Gaze of the Bible

Under the Gaze of the Bible

Under the Gaze of the Bible

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Overview

Chretien's essays on reading sacred scripture are enriched by his immersion in the classics of ancient philosophy and theology, as well as his poetic sensibility. He is as likely to quote Claudel as Aquinas or Origen. His intimate acquaintance with Patristic writings combines with a sympathetic understanding of such Protestant sources as Luther, Calvin, and Barth to yield an admirably ecumenical perspective.

The book's title refers to James 1:23-24, which portrays the Word of God as a mirror into which one gazes. The concomitant notion of not only examining the text but also being examined by the Word is a fruitful one for learning how to be more fully nourished by one's study of the Bible.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780823262328
Publisher: Fordham University Press
Publication date: 10/15/2014
Series: Perspectives in Continental Philosophy
Pages: 144
Sales rank: 930,918
Product dimensions: 5.90(w) x 8.90(h) x 0.40(d)

About the Author

Jean-Louis Chrétien was Professor of Philosophy at the University of Paris-IV, Sorbonne. His books in English translation include The Unforgettable and the Unhoped For, The Call and the Response, and Hand to Hand: Listening to the Work of Art (all Fordham).

John Marson Dunaway is Professor of French and Interdisciplinary Studies at Mercer University, Macon, Georgia.

Table of Contents

Preface
Acknowledgments
1 Reading the Bible Today
2 Allowing Oneself to Be Read Authoritatively by the Holy Scripture
3 Kierkegaard and the Mirror of Scripture
4 Th e Wisdom Learned at the Foot of the Cross
5 Th e Docility of the Bishop as Doctor of the Faith According to Saint Augustine
6 Biblical Figures of Joy
7 On Christian Hope
8 Nine Propositions on the Christian Concept of Witness
Notes
Index
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