About the disciple known as Doubting Thomas, everyone knows at least
this much: he stuck his finger into the risen Jesus' wounds. Or did
he? A fresh look at the Gospel of John reveals how little we may
really understand about this most perplexing of biblical figures, and
how much we might learn from the strange twists and turns Thomas's
story has taken over time. From the New Testament, Glenn W. Most
traces Thomas's permutations through the centuries: as Gnostic saint,
missionary to India, paragon of Christian orthodoxy, hero of
skepticism, and negative example of doubt, blasphemy, stupidity, and
violence. Rife with paradoxes and tensions, these creative
transformations at the hands of storytellers, theologians, and artists
tell us a great deal about the complex relations between texts and
their interpretations--and about faith, love, personal identity, the
body, and twins, among other matters. Doubting Thomas begins with a
close reading of chapter 20 of the Gospel of John, set against the
conclusions of the other Gospels, and ends with a detailed analysis of
the painting of this subject by Caravaggio, setting it within the
pictorial traditions of late antiquity, the Middle Ages, and the
Renaissance. Along the way, Most considers narrative reactions to
John's account by storytellers of various religious persuasions, and
Christian theologians' interpretations of John 20 from the second
century ad until the Counter-Reformation. His work shows how Thomas's
story, in its many guises, touches upon central questions of religion,
philosophy, hermeneutics, and, not least, life.
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Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780674041257
Publisert
2021
Utgiver
Harvard University Press
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter