The Cambridge History of the Bible: Volume 2: The West from the Fathers to the Reformation
Pages
628
Publisher
Cambridge University Press
Published
10/1/1975
ISBN-13
9780521290173
The Cambridge History treats the Bible as a central document of Western civilization, a source of exegesis and of doctrine, an influence on education, on the growth of scholarship, on art and literature, as well as on the liturgy and the life of the Christian church and its members. This volume commences the study of the Bible in the West. It begins with Jerome and the Fathers and goes on to the time of Erasmus. Introductory chapters look back and rapidly survey the growth of the biblical canon in the pre-Christian period and the early church, and early Christian book-production. The central portion of the volume discusses exposition and exegesis of the Scriptures: in the hands of the Fathers, in the Medieval Schools, in the Liturgy and in the tradition of medieval Jewish scholarship. The permeation of European culture by the Scriptures is illustrated by themes in art and manuscript illustration, and by separate sections on each of the main vernacular languages, giving special attention to English. Each chapter is written by a scholar and expert on the subject, who summarizes existing knowledge and, in many cases, advances it by reporting his own research.
- Preface
- 1. The Old Testament: manuscripts, text and versions Rev. Professor Bleddyn J. Roberts, D.D.
- 2. The history of the text and canon of the New Testament to Jerome C. S. C. Williams
- 3. Early Christian book-production: papyri and manuscripts T. C. Skeat
- 4. Jerome Fr E. F. Sutcliffe, S.J.
- 5. The medieval history of the Latin Vulgate Raphael Loewe
- 6. The exposition and exegesis of scripture
- 7. The 'People's Bible': artists and commentators Rev. R. L. P. Milburn
- 8. Bible illustration in medieval manuscripts Professor Francis Wormald
- 9. The Vernacular scriptures
- 10. Erasmus in relation to the medieval biblical tradition Fr Louis Bouyer, D.D.
- Bibliography
- Notes on the plates
- Plates
- Indexes.