Christ Meets Me Everywhere
Augustine's Early Figurative Exegesis
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Oxford University Press Inc
Published:20th Sep '12
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
Most readers first encounter Augustine's love for Scripture's words in the many biblical allusions of his masterwork, the Confessions. Augustine does not merely quote texts, but in many ways makes Scripture itself tell the story. In his journey from darkness to light, Augustine becomes Adam in the Garden of Eden, the Prodigal Son of Jesus' parable, the Pauline double personality at once devoted to and rebellious against God's law. Throughout he speaks the words of the Psalms as if he had written them. Crucial to Augustine's self-portrayal is his skill at transposing himself into the texts. He sees their properties and dynamics as his own, and by extension, every believing reader's own. In Christ Meets Me Everywhere, Michael Cameron argues that Augustine wanted to train readers of Scripture to transpose themselves into the texts in the same way he did, by the same process of figuration that he found at its core. Tracking Augustine's developing practice of self-transposition into the figures of the biblical texts over the course of his entire career, Cameron shows that this practice is the key to Augustine's hermeneutics.
This magisterial monograph serves as both a survey of Augustine's theological development as well as a mini-commentary on his most foundational. * Church History *
ISBN: 9780199751297
Dimensions: 163mm x 239mm x 33mm
Weight: 774g
432 pages