Nicholas Boyle's latest work begins with an observation-from theologian and medievalist Father Marie-Dominique Chenu, O.P.-that the Bible should be seen as a divinely ordained mediation between human culture and divine truth. But how far can we say that the Bible is 'literature'? Chenu is surely right that God is revealed in Scripture not through a system of ideas, but through a vivid historical narrative of people and places. But the Bible is also a sacred book. Expanding on this central dilemma, Boyle demonstrates that biblical scholarship and literary criticism must work together in the largely neglected task of integrating theology and modern secular culture.
Boyle explores two lines of thought. In the first series of essays, he discusses a range of writers, primarily philosophers and theologians, who have treated the Bible as literature as a means of reconciling the sacred and the secular. In the second series, Boyle moves to the theme of literature as Bible, seeking a Catholic way of reading secular literature.
These sophisticated and learned essays-drawn from the Erasmus Lectures Boyle delivered at the University of Notre Dame in 2003-cover a remarkable range of philosophers, theologians, and writers, including Herder, Schleiermacher, Hegel, Levinas, Goethe, Austen, Melville, and Tolkien. This volume will reward its reader with penetrating, and often brilliant, insights.
Show moreNicholas Boyle's latest work begins with an observation-from theologian and medievalist Father Marie-Dominique Chenu, O.P.-that the Bible should be seen as a divinely ordained mediation between human culture and divine truth. But how far can we say that the Bible is 'literature'? Chenu is surely right that God is revealed in Scripture not through a system of ideas, but through a vivid historical narrative of people and places. But the Bible is also a sacred book. Expanding on this central dilemma, Boyle demonstrates that biblical scholarship and literary criticism must work together in the largely neglected task of integrating theology and modern secular culture.
Boyle explores two lines of thought. In the first series of essays, he discusses a range of writers, primarily philosophers and theologians, who have treated the Bible as literature as a means of reconciling the sacred and the secular. In the second series, Boyle moves to the theme of literature as Bible, seeking a Catholic way of reading secular literature.
These sophisticated and learned essays-drawn from the Erasmus Lectures Boyle delivered at the University of Notre Dame in 2003-cover a remarkable range of philosophers, theologians, and writers, including Herder, Schleiermacher, Hegel, Levinas, Goethe, Austen, Melville, and Tolkien. This volume will reward its reader with penetrating, and often brilliant, insights.
Show moreNicholas Boyle is a Fellow of Magdalene College and Professor of German Literary and Intellectual History at the University of Cambridge.
"Nicholas Boyle, a professor of German language and literature at
Cambridge University, may not be a familiar name in North American
intellectual circles, but he should be. Sacred and Secular
Scriptures is a hugely ambitious work, but it never comes across as
strained or overreaching. [T]he rewards of reading the book as a
whole are plentiful, and Boyle's exquisite prose style and habit of
pausing occasionally to summarize make even the most clotted
stretches of Germanic thought clear. As a storyteller he never lets
the reader forget how much has been at stake, theologically and
culturally, in the struggle to understand the meaning and authority
of Scripture. . . . his own synthesis is masterful."
—Commonweal
"This book is a welcome contribution. . . ." —Choice
". . . this work. . . demonstrate[s] the finer things that literary
criticism can achieve when it seeks something of the divine in a
body of writing. . . ." —First Things
"This is a slow read but worth the effort, full of insights."
—Mennonite
"Nicholas Boyle, professor of German literary and intellectual
history at Cambridge University, has written a remarkable book. . .
Boyle's distinctive proposal is that the site of theology. . . is
occupied by both sacred and secular scriptures. Thus his book
explores, in a creative and stimulating way, both the distinction
and overlap between these scriptures. In doing so he elaborates a
Catholic hermeneutical approach to literature. . . fine study. . .
." —Worship
"I have read Nicholas Boyle's book with immense satisfaction and, I
hope, much profit as a reader and teacher of literature. The first
part of it is a conspectus of the relevant field, a survey
—responsive, responsible, and critical—of the major figures. The
issue is the reading of the Bible and the reading of secular
literature in the shadow (or under the auspices) of the Bible. The
major figures are Herder, Schliermacher, Hegel, Hans Frei, Paul
Ricoeur, Hans-Georg Gadamer, and Emmanuel Levinas. Boyle's
commentaries are judicious: he holds his own without brow-beating
his subjects. In the second part of the book he offers readings of
Pascal's Pensees, Goethe's Faust. Melville's Moby-Dick and The
Encantadas, Jane Austen's Mansfield Park, Rupert Brooke's "The
Soldier," Ian McEwan's Atonement, and J.R.R.Tolkien's Lord of the
Rings. The readings are conducted under the beliefs that 'Jesus is
what the Law means' and that literature is language freed of
purpose and need. Boyle is an acute reader, persuasive but not
insistent. The only question he leaves urbanely open is: to read as
sensitively as this, does one need to be a Roman Catholic? Or is it
enough to be, as Boyle is, remarkably intelligent and just? Boyle
wants to keep the discussion going: he never bangs the door or
tells agnostics to stay out." —Denis Donoghue, New York
University
"Written with lucidity, vigor, and authority, Nicholas Boyle's
'Catholic Approach' is genuinely and generously catholic in spirit.
Taking literature to be the site of theology where sacred and
secular meet, Boyle examines influential readings on the Bible as
literature—notably Herder, Schleiermacher, Hegel and Levinas—and
then applies to literary writings—from Pascal, Goethe, Melville,
and Austen to Tolkien—critical principles derived from theology.
Boyle's reassessments of these major works challenge Catholics and
non-Catholics alike to rethink their assumptions about the Bible
and literature." —Theodore Ziolkowski, Princeton University
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