... there is a pleasing aesthetic to both books [Tradition and Imagination and Discipleship and Imagination], from their well-written prose to their jacket illustrations ... These two imaginative volumes make a strong case for celebrating the evolving of Christian traditions.

The Heythrop Journal

Both books reflect a wide-ranging engagement with a host of sources, some surprising and unexpected, which demonstrate that the tradition of the scholar priest itself is alive and continues to evolve in imaginative patterns.

The Heythrop Journal

Fascinating and thought-provoking.

Theological Book Review

Se alle

Brown has undertaken a Herculean task in both Tradition and Imagination and Discipleship and Imagination and rendered wonderful results. His encouragement of the Church to engage fully in ever-developing imaginative traditions is a worthy call and one to be applauded. These volumes are highly recommended.

Literature & Theology

We can be sure that this book and its sequel will play a hugely significant role in the debates of the decades ahead.

Theology

This is a major achievement, the fruit of long and extraordinarily varied study, written with Brown's characteristic clarity, opening doors into all sorts of fresh insights.

Theology

Quite magnificent.

James Barr, previously Professor of Hebrew, Oxford University, now Professor of the Hebrew Bible, Vanderbilt University.

Together they [the two volumes - of which this is the first] constitute an achievement unmatched by any British theologian for a long time. The range of erudition (biblical, historical, philosophical; in art, poetry and fiction) is remarkable ... it is likely to make a considerable impact in changing for the better the way in which the nature of doctrinal theology is conceived.

Maurice Wiles, Emeritus Professor of Divinity, University of Oxford.

Brown's scholarship is massive without ever becoming tedious, and the range of subjects covered - art, philosophy, literature, and the history and writings of three major world religions - is awesome.

Anthony Freeman, Times Higher Education Supplement

No one could read these two books [Tradition and Imagination and Discipleship and Imagination] without being grateful to Brown for his many rich insights and the challenge laid down by his refusal to embrace exclusively any one approach.

Anthony Freeman, Times Higher Education Supplement

Brown's hard critical eye forces us all to reconsider how firm the basis of our position really is, but the deftness with which he moves his argument and the breadth of his erudition are hugely fruitful for our understanding of the biblical witness, the continuing self-revelation of God, the tradition, the imagination, the arts and truth.

Journal of Ecclesiastical History

Tradition and revelation are often seen as opposites: tradition is viewed as being secondary and reactionary to revelation which is a one-off gift from God. Drawing on examples from Christian history, Judaism, Islam, and the classical world, this book challenges these definitions and presents a controversial examination of the effect history and cultural development has on religious belief: its narratives and art. David Brown pays close attention to the nature of the relationship between historical and imaginative truth, and focuses on the way stories from the Bible have not stood still but are subject to imaginative 'rewriting'. This rewriting is explained as a natural consequence of the interaction between religion and history: God speaks to humanity through the imagination, and human imagination is influenced by historical context. It is the imagination that ensures that religion continues to develop in new and challenging ways.
Les mer
Revelation is seen as a gift from God given only once. Challenging this idea, this book examines the effect cultural development has on religious belief, narrative, and art. Exploring the nature of the relationship between historical and imaginative truth, it argues that post-canonical traditions have functioned as enrichments of religious belief.
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`we can be sure that this book and its sequel will play a hugely significant role in the debates of the decades ahead.' Theology, vol. CIV, no. 822 `This is a major achievement, the fruit of long and extraordinarily varied study, written with Brown's characteristic clarity, opening doors into all sorts of fresh insights.' Theology, vol. CIV, no. 822 `Brown is excellent on how and why we need the different stresses of the different Gospels, and resists the temptation to give the moral high ground to one perspective only.' Theology, vol. CIV, no. 822 `impressive' Theology, vol. CIV, no. 822 `David Brown has not only brought Anglican theology to a whole new level of achievement but also proposed a new role for imagination in a way that will mark a turning point in Christian esthetics.' Theological Studies `This is the most impressive theological book I have read in quite a long time. It is packed with erudition along with careful thinking ... Professor Brown has given us a first-class book that is both illuminating in itself and that challenges the reader to think further on matters that are central to Christian faith.' John Macquarrie, Journal of Theological Studies, Vol.52, No.1, April 2001 `Brown's scholarship is massive without ever becoming tedious, and the range of subjects covered - art,philosophy, literature, and the history and writings of three major world religions - is awesome.' Anthony Freeman, THES `No one could read these two books [Tradition and Imagination and Discipleship and Imagination] without being grateful to Brown for his many rich insights and the challenge laid down by his refusal to embrace exclusively any one approach.' Anthony Freeman, THES `David Brown knows that some Christians will find this book disturbing and is at pains to reassure them. We must overcome our timidity and face up to his arguments. They are immensely important for the understanding of our faith.' Mervyn Willshaw, Methodist Recorder `This is a very significant book ... and it offers a creative and liberating approach to revelation which could help in the resolution of many of the doctrinal and ethical problems which divide Christians now.' Mervyn Willshaw, Methodist Recorder `Preachers will find his treatment of the birth stories particularly useful for Christmas sermons.' Mervyn Willshaw, Methodist Recorder `In sum, a thought provoking book in every way. We await the second volume with keen anticipation.' Walter Moberly, Reviews in Religion and Theology `a systematic theologian ... at home in biblical criticism, classical antiquity, Judaism and Islam, and the history of art' Walter Moberly, Reviews in Religion and Theology `Its presentation is in many ways ways characteristic of Anglican divines, being marked by wide erudition, lucidity of expression, a rootedness in scripture and tradition that is utilized in reasonable, open and eirenic ways, and a concern for the historic and contemporary life of the church in the wider world. Whatever the travails of contemporary Anglicanism, one of its distinctive kinds of voice is here and well.' Walter Moberly, Reviews in Religion and Theology `one of the most exciting books that I have read recently ... Again and again a sentence or a paragraph opens up new vistas and invites the reader to view the Christian faith in fresh perspective, while the working out of the overarching scheme is most impressive ... Simple though the thesis may appear, the working out is profound. Professor Brown's immense erudition is daunting. Not only does he reveal an intimate knowledge of biblical studies, patristics, the classical world, modern theologians and philosophers, Judaism and Islam, but he also draws extensively on the history of art, including the cinema.' The Expository Times, November 1999
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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9780198269915
Publisert
1999
Utgiver
Vendor
Oxford University Press
Vekt
608 gr
Høyde
223 mm
Bredde
145 mm
Dybde
28 mm
Aldersnivå
P, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
410

Forfatter