*COD & Shipping Charges may apply on certain items.
Review final details at checkout.
₹1898
₹3080
38% OFF
Paperback
All inclusive*
Qty:
1
About The Book
Description
Author
Description: George Herbert in his poetic skill and the depth of the spiritual experiences he explores may be the greatest of all religious poets. This is a study of the specific religious experiences and beliefs that Herbert writes about both in his poetry and in his prose. As such it also examines the spiritual landscape of seventeenth-century England a period for all of its controversies still dominated by the understanding of God and the human condition articulated by Martin Luther and systematized by John Calvin. Reformation spirituality which was different both from medieval Catholicism and late Protestantism is itself little understood by literary historians who have tended to look to medieval or Counter-Reformation ideas and practices or to a simplistic distinction between Anglicans and Puritans as ways of understanding the religion of the time. This study presents Reformation spirituality phenomenologically from the inside. Just as Reformation spirituality reflects Herberts poetry Herberts poetry illuminates Reformation spirituality showing the experiential and mystical dimensions of an important religious tradition. Endorsements: For the reader who wants to understand George Herberts unique Protestant aesthetic Gene Veiths Reformation Spirituality is indispensible reading. Theologically alert historically aware and artistically generous Veiths book helped to dispel many foggy and anachronistic notions about Tudor-Stuart religion when it first appeared a generation ago and its strong steady light still shines. Is there in truth no beauty? Herbert provocatively asks in Jordan I. Veiths emphatic answer is Very much indeed. -Christopher Hodgkins University of North Carolina at Greensboro -Co-Founder The George Herbert Society -Author Authority Church and Society in George Herbert: Return to the Middle Way Veiths book is a scrupulous and sensitive reading of the protestant spirituality underlying much of Herberts poetry - particularly helpfully identifying parallels with Calvins theology - and constitutes an important contribution to scholarship on the early modern English devotional lyric. -Helen Wilcox Professor of English Bangor University Wales -editor The English Poems of George Herbert (Cambridge University Press 2007) About the Contributor(s): Dr. Gene Edward Veith is Provost and Professor of Literature at Patrick Henry College. He is the author of 18 books on topics involving literature Christianity and culture classical education theology and the arts. They include Reading Between the Lines Painters of Faith Postmodern Times Classical Education Loving God With All Your Mind and The Spirituality of the Cross.