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Bibliographic Detail
Publisher
Yale University Press
Publication date
October 24, 2017
Pages
616
Binding
Hardcover
ISBN-13
9780300186093
ISBN-10
0300186096
Dimensions
1.56 by 6.12 by 9.25 in.
Original list price
$35.00
Amazon.com says people who bought this book also bought:
That All Shall Be Saved: Heaven, Hell, and Universal Salvation | The Hebrew Bible: A Translation with Commentary (Vol. Three-Volume Set) | The Story of Christianity | Five Books of Moses | Atheist Delusions | The Kingdom New Testament | The Experience of God
That All Shall Be Saved: Heaven, Hell, and Universal Salvation | The Hebrew Bible: A Translation with Commentary (Vol. Three-Volume Set) | The Story of Christianity | Five Books of Moses | Atheist Delusions | The Kingdom New Testament | The Experience of God
Summaries and Reviews
Amazon.com description: Product Description:
From one of our most celebrated writers on religion comes this fresh, bold, and unsettling new translation of the New Testament
David Bentley Hart undertook this new translation of the New Testament in the spirit of “etsi doctrina non daretur,” “as if doctrine is not given.” Reproducing the texts’ often fragmentary formulations without augmentation or correction, he has produced a pitilessly literal translation, one that captures the texts’ impenetrability and unfinished quality while awakening readers to an uncanniness that often lies hidden beneath doctrinal layers.
The early Christians’ sometimes raw, astonished, and halting prose challenges the idea that the New Testament affirms the kind of people we are. Hart reminds us that they were a company of extremists, radical in their rejection of the values and priorities of society not only at its most degenerate, but often at its most reasonable and decent. “To live as the New Testament language requires,” he writes, “Christians would have to become strangers and sojourners on the earth, to have here no enduring city, to belong to a Kingdom truly not of this world. And we surely cannot do that, can we?”
David Bentley Hart undertook this new translation of the New Testament in the spirit of “etsi doctrina non daretur,” “as if doctrine is not given.” Reproducing the texts’ often fragmentary formulations without augmentation or correction, he has produced a pitilessly literal translation, one that captures the texts’ impenetrability and unfinished quality while awakening readers to an uncanniness that often lies hidden beneath doctrinal layers.
The early Christians’ sometimes raw, astonished, and halting prose challenges the idea that the New Testament affirms the kind of people we are. Hart reminds us that they were a company of extremists, radical in their rejection of the values and priorities of society not only at its most degenerate, but often at its most reasonable and decent. “To live as the New Testament language requires,” he writes, “Christians would have to become strangers and sojourners on the earth, to have here no enduring city, to belong to a Kingdom truly not of this world. And we surely cannot do that, can we?”
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