SUBSCRIBER LOGIN






Search First Things

Advanced Search
« Previous  |Home|  Next »         

Wednesday, December 9, 2009, 8:50 AM

Frequent First Things‘ contributor Matthew Milliner claims that David Bentley Hart, a contributing writer for FT, has written the “theological book of the decade“:

Hart’s 2003 tome [The Beauty of the Infinite] was the theological book of the decade, a postmodern elegy, and it has taken the rest of the decade to percolate down. Sure self-professed postmodern Christian thinkers persist, but to those who have read Hart, they are like ghosts in the land of the living – barely even there. Is this overly-privileging one man’s take on a complicated, multifaceted movement? No. There were many thinkers to whom one could have gone for similar perspectives, it’s just that Hart encapsulated them. The book emerged from a community of thinkers, but was delivered with an individual panache that took up the postmodern invitation “for theology to respond in kind.” A beautifully written book about the primacy of beauty.

In hindsight, those early, pre-Hart theological engagements of postmodern thought look like sixteenth-century maps of the Americas, with vast swaths labeled “terra incognita.” No one can blame those first explorers for inaccuracy. As they engaged the (then) new and (then) popular modes of thought, they found patches of vegetation in what was supposed to be pure tundra, and they excitedly pointed out the green. But now, thanks to Hart, the cartography is nearly complete. We know what the landscape actually looks like. Both the “Thar be dragons” of the fear-mongers and elephant graveyards promised by progressives have been exposed. There were dragons, but they’re sickly now, and not so terrifying. There was little ivory to speak of. Postmodernism has been mapped, flood-lit by Cappadocian light and declared unfit for settlement. Emboldened by his confidence in analogy, Hart moved us on to the welcoming, fertile Nicean fields.

Related: Geoffrey Wainwright reviewed The Beauty of the Infinite in the March 2004 issue.

3 Comments

    Sue
    December 9th, 2009 | 8:08 pm

    Since when have theologians, however seemingly inspired, been the authorities on the Truth of any Tradition.

    Once upon and time and in all of the great cultures and civilizations if one wanted to find out about the Truth of existence one always sought out the company and instruction of a Living Saint or Mystic.

    Beings (male or female) who had actually Realized something remarkable about the nature of Existence, and who were thus Living demonstrations of the Truth of the Tradition in which they appeared.

    Or one turned to the Sacred Texts or went to the temple and participated in the various Sacramental rituals that were done every day. For instance canting of Divine names or the doing of Puja in the case of the Hindus.

    Plus none of the Sacred Texts of any of the Traditions were written by theologians.

    The various people who wrote the various books of the Bible were not in any sense theologians.

    Jesus was not a theologian. Nor were the great fiery prophets of the Old Testament.

    Plus another test of the authenticity of any and every ones religion is always demonstrated in the company they keep and their other various associations.

    Are they good company to all beings, without being self-righteous.

    Do they practice and promote the virtues of universal tolerance and compassion. Virtues which are inherent in heart-felt state of prior unity in and as which we all exist.

    Or do they promote the ancient politics of sectarian cultic one-upmanship and the dreadful bloody politics that inevitably extends from such an attitude.

    thomas
    December 10th, 2009 | 10:28 am

    Since Saint Paul, Sue.

    This morning’s Catholic must-reads « Editor's Briefing
    December 11th, 2009 | 3:23 am

    [...] Matthew Milliner names the theological book of the decade. [...]

Links

Blogs

Find Us

Contact