The Fellowship of the Beatific Vision: Chaucer on Overcoming Tyranny and Becoming Ourselves: 22 (Veritas)
English


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About The Book

In The Canterbury Tales Geoffrey Chaucer asks a basic human question: How do we overcome tyranny? His answer goes to the heart of a revolutionary way of thinking about the very end of human existence and the nature of created being. His answer declared performatively over the course of a symbolic pilgrimage urges the view that humanity has an intrinsic need of grace in order to be itself. In portraying this outlook Chaucer contributes to what has been called the palaeo-Christian understanding of creaturely freedom. Paradoxically genuine freedom grows out of the dependency of all things upon God. In imaginatively inhabiting this view of reality Chaucer aligns himself with that other great poet-theologian of the Middle Ages Dante. Both are true Christian humanists. They recognize in art a fragile opportunity: not to reduce reality to a set of dogmatic propositions but to participate in an ever-deepening mystery. Chaucer effectively calls all would-be members of the pilgrim fellowship that is the church to behave as artists interpretively responding to God in the finitude of their existence together. The Canterbury Tales do much more than narrate disparate and conflicting stories of a traveling band of pilgrims. Norm Klassen opens up the premodern horizons of the tales by explaining that Chaucers oblique apologetic intends to draw us into the sacramental ontology that animates the narrative. Klassens exposition opens our eyes to the myriad ways in which the beatific vision is adumbrated in the midst of clashing voices and this-worldly realities that we inhabit. --Hans Boersma J. I. Packer Professor of Theology Regent College; author of Heavenly Participation: The Weaving of a Sacramental Tapestry (2011) Chaucerian Norm Klassen notes that Chaucers poetry is nothing if not hopeful [and that] he invites his audience and readers to share in the mirth of belief. And this is also what Klassen does in this richly textured theological reading of the master pilgrim who leads us into strange lands full of mystery grace and possibility. Theology and art conjoin in a luminous way through Klassens imagination and the reader participates vicariously in a peregrination wondrous and surprising. --Michael W. Higgins biographer; Thomas Merton scholar; author of Jean Vanier: Logician of the Heart Norm Klassen is Associate Professor of English Literature at St Jeromes University in Waterloo Canada. He is the author of Chaucer on Love Knowledge and Sight (1995) and coauthor of The Passionate Intellect: Incarnational Humanism and the Future of University Education (2006).
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