ABSTRACT

Producing Christian Culture takes as its thread the 'interpretative genres' within which medieval people engaged with the Bible. Contributors to the volume present specific material as a case study illustrative of a specific genre, whether devotional, homiletical, scholarly, or controversial. The chronological range moves from St Augustine to the use of gospel texts in polemical writing of the first two decades of the 1500s, with focal sections on early medieval Anglo-Saxon and Carolingian theology, the scholastic turn of the High Middle Ages, and the influence of vernacular writing in the later Middle Ages. The tremendous range and vitality of medieval responses to biblical texts are highlighted within the studies.

chapter |7 pages

Introduction

part I|35 pages

Inheritances

part II|69 pages

Learning and teaching through Scripture

chapter 2|18 pages

Lindisfarne and the gospels

The art of interpretation

chapter 3|24 pages

Scholarly practices

The Eusebian canon tables in the Hiberno-Latin tradition

chapter 4|25 pages

Historia and littera in Carolingian commentaries on St Matthew

Elements for an inventory of exegetical vocabulary in the medieval Latin Church

part III|57 pages

The changing roles of Scripture

chapter 6|12 pages

Secretum internae uisionis

The introspective reader and the pilgrim soul in William’s Commentary

chapter 7|15 pages

Conceiving the Word

The Virgin Mary and the Gospel of Luke in Hildegard of Bingen’s Scivias

part IV|38 pages

Scripture and the world

chapter 8|17 pages

Manifest, as in the gospels

Some approaches to literal exposition of the psalms