Storied Revelations: Parables, Imagination and George MacDonald's Christian Fiction by Gisela H. Kreglinger, Paperback, 9780718893293 | Buy online at The Nile
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Storied Revelations: Parables, Imagination and George MacDonald's Christian Fiction

Parables, Imagination and George MacDonald's Christian Fiction

Author: Gisela H. Kreglinger  

'Storied Revelations' explores the interface between the Bible and George MacDonald's fiction.

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Summary

'Storied Revelations' explores the interface between the Bible and George MacDonald's fiction.

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Description

Parables were used by Jesus to reveal to us the kingdom of God and to move us from being bystanders to active recipients of God's work of revelation. However, parables are constantly at risk of being buried as 'mummies of prose', as George MacDonald puts it. We become so familiar with the language of Scripture that Jesus' parables no longer work on us in this revelatory and transforming way. George MacDonald, the Victorian poet and theologian, observed this very process at work in Victorian society. It was a culture saturated with Christian jargon but often devoid of a profound understanding of the gospel for its own time and culture. The language of Scripture no longer penetrated people's hearts, imaginations, and attitudes; it no longer transformed people's lives. MacDonald, called to be a pastor, turned a story and more specifically the 'parabolic' as a means of spiritual awakening. He created fictive worlds in which the language of Jesus would find a new home and regain its revelatory power for his particular Victorian audience.

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Critic Reviews

“I have not read any of George MacDonald's Christian fiction. Kreglinger's examination has put his work at the top of my 'to-read' list. ...Storied Revelations is an exhortation to any who engage with the Bible to do so using their imagination.”

'She absolutely and successfully extrapolates how MacDonald used the parabolic form. Kreglinger demonstrates how as a Calvinistic Scot, as a Victorian, as a poet and theologian, George MacDonald observed this desensitization process at work in late nineteenth century Victorian society. All around an excellent study'.Paul Brazier, The Heythrope Journal, vol. 56, issue 2, March 2015''- Sarah Agnew, The Expository Times, Vol. 127 No. 8, May 2016'As a whole, the book is interesting and makes a good case for its various arguments. The book is quite detailed in many aspects, yet provides enough of an introduction to those not significantly read in studies of parables, metaphors, and imagery. The later portion of the book was the most engaging, for it was here that the build-up of topics was expressed in the study of why George MacDonald used parables, and how this was expressed particularly within Lilith.'- Kris Hiuser, Theological Book Review, Vol. 27 No.1, 2016'Anyone who courts interest in MacDonald should read Kreglinger.'- Jordan Daniel Wood, Reviews in Religion and Theology, Volume 24 Issue 4, October 2017

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Product Details

Publisher
Lutterworth Press
Published
28th August 2014
Pages
236
ISBN
9780718893293

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