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9780813950532 Academic Inspection Copy

On the Perpetual Strangeness of the Bible

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The language of the Bible can be beautiful but profoundly elusive, possessing a strangeness that only deepens the committed reader's sense of its impenetrability. Based on the 2022 Richard E. Myers lectures given by renowned literary scholar Michael Edwards-the first Englishman ever elected to the Academie francaise-this book offers a close reading of the Bible itself, directing attention to the text rather than to commentaries or to ostensible lessons to be discovered by paraphrase. Edwards explores the apparently simple instruction in Proverbs to eat honey and reveals unexpected complexity. He sounds the unfathomable depths of St. Paul's revelation that the Christian has "died" and yet now lives in Christ-and goes on to ask what it would mean to take the awesome expression "the kingdom of heaven is at hand" seriously. Three final meditations complete the movement by scrutinizing the visionary world of Revelation: the riddle of the work's composition, of its images, and of the enigmatic time in which its events occur.
Sir Michael Edwards is Honorary Fellow at Christ's College, Cambridge, Professor Emeritus at the College de France, and a member of the Academie francaise.
1. Preliminary 2. On Eating Honey 3. Paul on Life and Death 4. Heaven is Here 5. Seeing Revelation: The Writing 6. Seeing Revelation: The Images 7. Seeing Revelation: The Timing
A remarkable work of beauty, literary finesse, theological insight, and rich wisdom. I will keep thinking about this book for a long time to come. --Charles A. Gillespie, Sacred Heart University This is an unusual book, both in its blend of passion and elegance in presentation, and in its rigorous attention to the way in which the biblical text insists upon the fact that we cannot read intelligently without changing our entire imaginative and moral world. At once severe and enriching, it opens up a style of approaching the Bible that is both deep-rooted in traditional practice and exhilaratingly fresh. A wonderful and welcome meditation. --Rowan Williams, 104th Archbishop of Canterbury
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