The Transfiguration of Christ and Creation
The biblical story of Jesus' Transfiguration "on a high mountain" bristles with meanings germane to present-day concerns and spiritual longings. Together with its later artistic representations, this episode from the synoptic gospels seizes the imagination as an icon of mystical hope, beauty, and possibility. What might such an iconic episode, long honored liturgically in the Eastern church, disclose not only about Jesus, but also about the prospect of seeing our human nature transformed? And as interpreted by Christian tradition since the patristic era, what might it tell us about the worth of envisioning not just a conservation or preservation of natural resources but a transfiguration of all creation, and about how this "feast of beauty" could re-energize current discussions of Christianity's relation to environmental attitudes and policy? Such questions are addressed in this book through an original blend of personal reflection with commentary on relevant theological and scriptural texts, literary works, music, and art.
1102244449
The Transfiguration of Christ and Creation
The biblical story of Jesus' Transfiguration "on a high mountain" bristles with meanings germane to present-day concerns and spiritual longings. Together with its later artistic representations, this episode from the synoptic gospels seizes the imagination as an icon of mystical hope, beauty, and possibility. What might such an iconic episode, long honored liturgically in the Eastern church, disclose not only about Jesus, but also about the prospect of seeing our human nature transformed? And as interpreted by Christian tradition since the patristic era, what might it tell us about the worth of envisioning not just a conservation or preservation of natural resources but a transfiguration of all creation, and about how this "feast of beauty" could re-energize current discussions of Christianity's relation to environmental attitudes and policy? Such questions are addressed in this book through an original blend of personal reflection with commentary on relevant theological and scriptural texts, literary works, music, and art.
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The Transfiguration of Christ and Creation

The Transfiguration of Christ and Creation

by John Gatta
The Transfiguration of Christ and Creation

The Transfiguration of Christ and Creation

by John Gatta

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Overview

The biblical story of Jesus' Transfiguration "on a high mountain" bristles with meanings germane to present-day concerns and spiritual longings. Together with its later artistic representations, this episode from the synoptic gospels seizes the imagination as an icon of mystical hope, beauty, and possibility. What might such an iconic episode, long honored liturgically in the Eastern church, disclose not only about Jesus, but also about the prospect of seeing our human nature transformed? And as interpreted by Christian tradition since the patristic era, what might it tell us about the worth of envisioning not just a conservation or preservation of natural resources but a transfiguration of all creation, and about how this "feast of beauty" could re-energize current discussions of Christianity's relation to environmental attitudes and policy? Such questions are addressed in this book through an original blend of personal reflection with commentary on relevant theological and scriptural texts, literary works, music, and art.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781498274074
Publisher: Wipf & Stock Publishers
Publication date: 01/01/2011
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 166
File size: 15 MB
Note: This product may take a few minutes to download.

About the Author

John Gatta is Professor of English and Dean of the College at Sewanee: The University of the South. His publications include Making Nature Sacred: Literature, Religion, and Environment in America from the Puritans to the Present ( 2004), together with other books and numerous articles.

Table of Contents

Illustrations ix

Preface xi

Introduction: The Transfiguration as Verbal Icon xv

Part I Three Aspects of Transfiguration

1 Icon of the Invisible God 3

2 And we shall all be changed 12

3 Transfiguring the Material World 24

Part II Consequences of a Transfiguration Gospel

4 Death and Transfiguration 41

5 Toward a Spirituality of Transfiguration 52

6 Liturgies, Festivals, and the Prospect of a Transfigurative "Earth Day" 64

7 The Art of Transfiguration 76

8 Transforming Society 87

9 Another Metamorphosis: The Greening of Religious Culture 99

10 Postlude: A Sequence of Meditations on Metamorphosis 119

Appendix: Sermon Preached in the University Chapel, Sewanee, 1911, On the Feast of the Transfiguration William Porcher DuBose 131

Bibliography 137

Index of Names 143

What People are Saying About This

From the Publisher

"John Gatta demonstrates in a masterful way how the Transfiguration, largely ignored by modernist theologians of a secularizing mindset, is in fact an organizing principle that bridges the immanence of this world with the transcendence of that which is to come . . . Firmly rooted in the wisdom of the writers of the early church, the message of this book brings us all the way forward to strikingly modern concerns for the environment, ecology, elevated levels of consciousness, and the transformation of society. Especially noteworthy are the author's calls for enhanced liturgical commemoration of this feast as well as for its recognition as the proper Christian counterpart of Earth Day."
—J. Robert Wright
St. Mark's Professor of Ecclesiastical History
General Theological Seminary, New York City

"In this wise and beautifully written book, John Gatta leads us up the mount of Transfiguration where, drawing on literature, music, science, art, and a rich Trinitarian theology, he helps us enter anew into the astonishing promise that Christ's glorification holds for us and for the whole creation. It is in the transfigured Christ, he argues, that we behold most clearly our kinship with the community of life, and it is in him that we shall find the inspiration to begin the hard work of individual, corporate, and environmental transformation. This is a summons to be heeded and Gatta's book is one to be treasured."
—John Orens author of Stewart Headlam's Radical Anglicanism: The Mass, the Masses, and the Music Hall

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