We're sorry. An error has occurred
Please cancel or retry.
Heaven in Ordinary
Regular price
$29.99
Regular price
$0.00
Sale price
$29.99
Unit price
/
per
Sold out
Re-stocking soon
A personal journey through poetry and faith, exploring the themes of five English poets in relation to Christianity and the Anglican tradition in particular.Heaven in Ordinary is like a love affair...
Read More
Some error occured while loading the Quick View. Please close the Quick View and try reloading the page.
Couldn't load pickup availability
Ships within 2 business days
-
29 November 2018

A personal journey through poetry and faith, exploring the themes of five English poets in relation to Christianity and the Anglican tradition in particular.
Heaven in Ordinary is like a love affair with poetry that engages with religious questions, for good or ill, concerned with five poets who are haunted by God. Poets, in times of great faith and times of doubt, have expressed for us their sense of both the presence and the absence of God in language that is sometimes almost sacramental in its weight of beauty, love, fear, anger or despair. The poets considered here all relate, in some way, to the traditions of Anglicanism through the centuries, reflecting both a common humanity and a wide breadth of human experience as it struggles with God. Heaven in Ordinary is deliberately autobiographical in approach, as it is grounded in David Jasper's own lifetime experience of reading poetry since his school years, and over four decades as a priest. The poets he so beautifully discusses have related both positively and negatively to the Christian faith and the Anglican tradition. Some are deeply religious, others are haunted by God and the divine mystery.
Heaven in Ordinary is like a love affair with poetry that engages with religious questions, for good or ill, concerned with five poets who are haunted by God. Poets, in times of great faith and times of doubt, have expressed for us their sense of both the presence and the absence of God in language that is sometimes almost sacramental in its weight of beauty, love, fear, anger or despair. The poets considered here all relate, in some way, to the traditions of Anglicanism through the centuries, reflecting both a common humanity and a wide breadth of human experience as it struggles with God. Heaven in Ordinary is deliberately autobiographical in approach, as it is grounded in David Jasper's own lifetime experience of reading poetry since his school years, and over four decades as a priest. The poets he so beautifully discusses have related both positively and negatively to the Christian faith and the Anglican tradition. Some are deeply religious, others are haunted by God and the divine mystery.
Price: $29.99
Pages: 159
Publisher: Boydell & Brewer Inc.
Imprint: Lutterworth Press
Publication Date:
29 November 2018
Trim Size: 9.21 X 6.14 in
ISBN: 9780718895419
Format: Paperback
BISACs:
RELIGION / Christian Theology / General, Christianity, Theology
Jasper's love of poetry and admitted inability to escape that Christian faith which has taken hold of him, release insights personal and profound. Through the five poets he has selected, Jasper seeks a gentle divinity, present in the world, far away from the apparent crass ruthlessness and drive of the current Church.
— Rt Revd Robert A. Gillies, Formerly Bishop of Aberdeen and Orkney and Honorary Research Fellow in the University of Glasgow
Heaven in Ordinary takes us on an exhilarating reading journey into the heart of a territory that is at once endearingly familiar, and yet also astoundingly strange. This is an engaging, profound and moving book that is full of wonder. Like the poets and priests it celebrates, it is self-effacing and yet extraordinary.
— Heather Walton, Professor of Theology and Creative Practice, University of Glasgow
Professor Jasper calls in Ordinary a 'little book'. But, as you read, it dawns upon you that it is in fact a 'big book': in prose suffused by his love of words as living things, the author generously gives a searingly honest account of his lifelong love affair with poetry and particular poets. I cannot commend this book too warmly - it simply should be read for the love, insight, intelligence and more than occasional waspishness that grace and inform its pages.
— Rt Revd Dr Gregor Duncan, Bishop of Glasgow & Galloway
a deeply convinced and convincing reading of poetry and religion in and for a secular age
— alison Jack, school of divinity, uni of edinburgh, literature & theology 0(0) june 2019
— Rt Revd Robert A. Gillies, Formerly Bishop of Aberdeen and Orkney and Honorary Research Fellow in the University of Glasgow
Heaven in Ordinary takes us on an exhilarating reading journey into the heart of a territory that is at once endearingly familiar, and yet also astoundingly strange. This is an engaging, profound and moving book that is full of wonder. Like the poets and priests it celebrates, it is self-effacing and yet extraordinary.
— Heather Walton, Professor of Theology and Creative Practice, University of Glasgow
Professor Jasper calls in Ordinary a 'little book'. But, as you read, it dawns upon you that it is in fact a 'big book': in prose suffused by his love of words as living things, the author generously gives a searingly honest account of his lifelong love affair with poetry and particular poets. I cannot commend this book too warmly - it simply should be read for the love, insight, intelligence and more than occasional waspishness that grace and inform its pages.
— Rt Revd Dr Gregor Duncan, Bishop of Glasgow & Galloway
a deeply convinced and convincing reading of poetry and religion in and for a secular age
— alison Jack, school of divinity, uni of edinburgh, literature & theology 0(0) june 2019
1. Introduction
2. Thomas Hardy: Faith and Doubt
3. Samuel Taylor Coleridge: Words as Living Things
4. Thomas Traherne: Objects of Happiness
5. Sir Philip Sidney: High Matter in Noble Form
6. Sir Geoffrey Hill: The Strange Flesh Untouched
7. The Pastoral Tradition in English Poetry
8. Conclusion: or, Last Words
Reading List
Index
2. Thomas Hardy: Faith and Doubt
3. Samuel Taylor Coleridge: Words as Living Things
4. Thomas Traherne: Objects of Happiness
5. Sir Philip Sidney: High Matter in Noble Form
6. Sir Geoffrey Hill: The Strange Flesh Untouched
7. The Pastoral Tradition in English Poetry
8. Conclusion: or, Last Words
Reading List
Index