Saving Paradise: A Panel Discussion
| What | Pacific School of Religion Staff/Trustees Franciscan School of Theology Conferences Lectures and Seminars Dominican School of Philosophy & Theology Students Pacific Lutheran Theological Seminary General Public American Baptist Seminary of the West GTU Special Events Faculty Starr King School for the Ministry Women's Studies in Religion San Francisco Theological Seminary Church Divinity School of the Pacific Jesuit School of Theology at Berkeley |
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| When |
09-30-2008 05:30 PM
09-30-2008 07:30 PM
09-30-2008 from 05:30 pm to 07:30 pm |
| Where | PSR Bade |
| Contact Email | wsr@ses.gtu.edu |
| Add event to calendar |
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Women's Studies in Religion Colloquia Series
Authors, Rita Nakashima Brock, Rebecca Parker discuss their recent book, Saving Paradise, panelists.
A book that restores the idea of Paradise to its rightful place at the center of Christian thought
When Rita Brock and Rebecca Parker began traveling the Mediterranean world in search of art depicting the dead, crucified Jesus, they discovered something that traditional histories of Christianity and Christian art had underplayed or sought to explain away: it took Jesus Christ a thousand years to die.
During their first millennium, Christians filled their sanctuaries with images of Christ as a living presence in a vibrant world. He appears as a shepherd, a teacher, a healer, an enthroned god; he is an infant, a youth, and a bearded elder. But he is never dead. When he appears with the cross, he stands in front of it, serene, resurrected. The world around him is ablaze with beauty. These are images of paradise—paradise as this world, permeated and blessed by the presence of God.
But once he perished, dying was virtually all Jesus seemed able to do.
Saving Paradise offers a fascinating new lens on the history of Christianity, from its first centuries to the present day, asking how its early vision of beauty evolved into a vision of torture, and what changes in society and theology marked that evolution.