One Response to “Landon Snow and the Shadows of Malus Quidam by R.K. Mortenson”

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  1. jg

    Kevin, I find my own critical literary thought enriched by the essays at
    http://www.scriptoriumdaily.com/middlebrow/
    At least some of the contributors are from Biola University (John Mark Reynolds, for one).
    Here is an excerpt of what Fred Sanders has to say about ‘Christian Romance,’ which was especially important during the Middle Ages, though Sanders here focuses on the 19th.

    –excerpt–(Romance)..’could also mean “A blending of the heroic, the marvellous, the mysterious, and the imaginative, in actions, manner, ideas, language, or literature.” This caught his eye.
    This second definition permits my use of the word, for the history of the Bible is a romance. It is a blending of the heroic, the marvellous, the mysterious, the full significance of which only the imagination can grasp. It is wonderful in its history. It transcends the ordinary. So it is a romance.’

    Calvinism (and I wonder if your modern Christian fantasy is from that tradition) has scarcely tolerated the Christian imagination. But other parts of the Church have embraced that part of the spirit wholeheartedly. (I am thinking of Arthur, Roland, the many saints of the Roman church as a few examples.) Are the Enlightenment term Gothic and Romance not intertwined?
    (Were I to teach English history, I would begin and end with Arthur, who lives most brilliantly in the person of King Alfred, the great Christian.)

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