The Allegorical Exegesis of Bede: 'Figures in History and the Shape of the Self' (original) (raw)

Biblical Exegesis and Mystical Theology in the Venerable Bede

Biblical Exegesis and Mystical Theology in the Venerable Bede brings together 17 essays by Arthur Holder exploring the theology and spirituality found in Bede's biblical commentaries and homilies. The volume shows that Bede was both a masterful student of received tradition and a creative thinker concerned to address the needs and interests of his audience of Christian pastors and teachers in the eighth-century Northumbrian church. Although Bede is best known as the author of The Ecclesiastical History of the English People, the last half-century of scholarship has demonstrated the sophistication and vast influence of his work in the fields of grammar, biblical interpretation, hagiography, poetry, computus, natural science, and theology. The chapters in this volume show how Bede's exegesis was integrally connected with his work in all those genres and with the monumental artistic productions of his monastery such as the illuminated bible manuscript known as the Codex Amiatinus. The five parts of the book deal with Bede as a teacher and biblical scholar, his interpretations of the tabernacle and the temple, his commentary on the Song of Songs, his attitudes toward philosophy and heresy, and his mystical theology. This book will be of interest to students of Christian theology, mysticism, the development of biblical interpretation, and the history of early medieval England.

Intepretative Peculialitiers of the Commentary on the Acts of the Apostles by Bede the Venerable

Seminare. Poszukiwania naukowe, 2020

In the Commentary on the Acts of the Apostles, Bede the Venerable goes beyond the literary level of the biblical text. Wishing to elucidate its message to the readers, he explains historical problems, deals with dating or refers to geographic and topographic data which provide the background to biblical events, so that the meaning of the inspired books could be best understood by his contemporaries. In this sense, the methodology used by Bede can be even more justifiably defined as eclectic and pastoral. Due to this approach, the Commentary on the Acts of the Apostles discussed in this article bears the hallmarks of originality as regards theological, philological as well as geographical aspects of the work.

Reassessing Exegetical Interpretations of Bede's Historia ecclesiastica gentis anglorum

Literature and Theology 17.3, 2003

This essay explores the role of miracles in Bede's construction of history to argue that, while reading miracles according to Bede's sense of exegetical history begins analysis, modern scholars should also look beyond the exegetical paradigm to better understand how Bede uses miracles to engage and understand the world. After a brief discussion of Caedmon's miracle as an example of how miracles ought to work, this essay contrasts Bede's account of Edwin with his account of Oswald to question Bede's presentation of Edwin as a saint-king, and to discuss the ways in which these episodes allow us to see Bede, as an historian, at work.

Pastoral eschatology, reform and book 5 of Bede's Historia ecclesiastica

2019

This thesis examines the eschatology of Bede's Historia ecclesiastica gentis Anglorum (AD731), and in particular the eschatological elements of the lesserstudied Book 5. Bede has a profound interest in the pastoral care of his people (not just those of his native Northumbria, but all Anglo-Saxons) and has a real fear that they are on the verge of missing out on salvation. He presents English

Typology: pros and cons in biblical hermeneutics and literary criticism (from Leonhard Goppelt to Northrop Frye)

Rilce-revista De Filologia Hispanica, 2009

The following essay is a survey of various theories of biblical typology (figuralism) in 20th century biblical hermeneutics and literary criticism. The word typology in biblical studies is a relatively modern coinage, it was not used in patristic literature together with tropologia, allegoria or anagogia. Sometimes it is used as a synonym with figuralism. More than ten years ago (Fabiny 1-2), I suggested that typology may refer to at least nine things: (1) a way of reading the Bible; (2) a principle of unity of the “Old” and the “New” Testaments in the Christian Bible; (3) a principle of exegesis; (4) a figure of speech; (5) a mode of thought; (6) a form of rhetoric; (7) a vision of history; (8) a principle of artistic composition; (9) a manifestation of “intertextuality”.