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English Poetry - 17th Century - Literary Criticism, Religious Poetry - Literary Criticism, English Poetry - General & Miscellaneous - Literary Criticism, English Fiction & Prose Literature - 16th-17th Century - Literary Criticism, British Literature - Ref
George Herbert's Holy Patterns: Reforming Individuals in Community by Greg Miller β€” book cover

George Herbert's Holy Patterns: Reforming Individuals in Community

by Greg Miller
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Overview

George Herbert's "Holy Patterns": Reforming Individuals in Community explores Herbert's understanding of full individuality in community. Living communities depend upon imagined histories and futures. Like his mother Lady Magdalen Danvers and her friend John Donne, and unlike many of his Anglican contemporaries, Herbert imagined significant continuity with the pre-Reformation past; that imagination was tied to a prophetic imagining of the future triumph of Christ's universal and apostolic church. Herbert's project was to 'purify' a unified national church from within, this purification taking place through lives lived communally in self-scrutiny, self-regulation, sacrifice, and loving service. Such 'holy patterns' of living were imagined as leading to the purification of the whole church, the spread of the Gospel, human advancement through what we would call scientific knowledge, and international peace. 

Synopsis

George Herbert's "Holy Patterns": Reforming Individuals in Community explores Herbert's understanding of full individuality in community. Living communities depend upon imagined histories and futures. Like his mother Lady Magdalen Danvers and her friend John Donne, and unlike many of his Anglican contemporaries, Herbert imagined significant continuity with the pre-Reformation past; that imagination was tied to a prophetic imagining of the future triumph of Christ's universal and apostolic church. Herbert's project was to "purify" a unified national church from within, this purification taking place through lives lived communally in self-scrutiny, self-regulation, sacrifice, and loving service. Such "holy patterns" of living were imagined as leading to the purification of the whole church, the spread of the Gospel, human advancement through what we would call scientific knowledge, and international peace.

About the Author:
Greg Miller is a professor of English at Millsaps College in Jackson, Mississippi

About the Author, Greg Miller

Greg Miller is Professor of English at Millsaps College in Jackson, Mississippi. His books of poems, Iron Wheel and Rib Cage, were nominated for the Pulitzer Prize and National Book Award.

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Book Details

Published
June 1, 2007
Publisher
Continuum International Publishing Group
Pages
192
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9780826428073

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