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Author Grant, Patrick, 1941-

Title Spiritual discourse and the meaning of persons / Patrick Grant
Published New York : St. Martin's Press, 1994

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Location Call no. Vol. Availability
 W'PONDS  233.5 Gra/Sda  AVAILABLE
Description x, 202 pages ; 22 cm
Contents 1. Introduction: The Argument in Outline -- 2. Jesus the Personal God -- 3. Origen of Alexandria: Face to Face with the Beloved -- 4. Julian of Norwich: God's Gladdest Countenance -- 5. Erasmus: The Masks of Folly and the Face of God -- 6. William Law: Imagination and the Transfiguring of Nature -- 7. Newman's Apologia: The Self in a Faceless World -- 8. Conclusion
Summary In short, Christian spirituality is a mysticism of transfiguration; an evolving idea of the person is central to it; and in written form it best finds expression as literature. This general argument is placed in the context of modern debates about personal identity and the idea of the self, with reference to the rise of modern literary studies. There are chapters on the New Testament, Origen of Alexandria, Julian of Norwich, Erasmus, William Law and John Henry Newman. A conclusion offers suggestions for a spiritual view of the person that remains viable in today's secular culture
The idea of what it means to be a person was shaped by theologians undertaking to define God in terms of personal relationships through the doctrine of the Trinity. But, as writers in the spiritual tradition show, theological definitions need to be supplemented by an imaginative grasp of how persons are also agents of transformation, called to engage and transfigure the historical conditions within which they find themselves. Consequently, the literature of Western spirituality explores the idea of the person by reproducing extensively a dialectic between theological definitions and evocative literary accounts of individual transformative experience. The gospel story of Transfiguration provides an especially useful way to chart the historical course of this dialectic because New Testament Greek prosopon (the countenance which is transfigured) is, in Latin, persona
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references (pages 177-197) and index
Subject Jesus Christ -- Transfiguration -- History of doctrines.
Theological anthropology -- Christianity -- History of doctrines.
Mysticism in literature.
Christian literature -- History and criticism.
Spirituality -- Christianity.
Theological anthropology -- Christianity.
LC no. 93039268
ISBN 031212077X
0333565819