In readable and nonscholarly fashion, Niehaus, who is both a theologian and poet, provides a theological and literary analysis of the epic poems of Dante (Divine Comedy), Milton (Paradise Lost), Cowper (The Task), and Wordsworth. Niehaus also presents the theological background of great poetry and shows how that background illuminates our understanding of important topics such as creation, sin, hell, the devil, beauty, truth, redemption, and God supremely manifested in Christ.
The most obvious feature of this book is the originality of the venture. Next to that we are impressed by the range of material that is covered—theological reflections on poetry, exploration of the autobiographical element in long poems by Dante, Milton, Cowper, and Wordsworth, and then unexpectedly a chapter on the author’s own autobiographical poem. Autobiography provides a loose thread to bind the book into a unity, but more important is the effect that the book creates of treating us to an engaging fireside chat with a knowledgeable and creative person.
—Leland Ryken, Ph.D., Professor of English, Wheaton College
Theology and poetry have much to say to one another, but seldom today are they allowed in the same room. In God the Poet, Niehaus brings the Bible into illuminating and evocative conversation with the likes of Plato, Milton, Pope, Coleridge, and Lewis. It’s a rich book I will return to in my own studies and one I will heartily recommend to my students.
—Karen Swallow Prior, Ph.D., Professor of English, Liberty University
Niehaus combines theological insights with literary analysis, all seen from the perspective of a practicing and reflective poet and Christian all-in-one. The result is a stimulating re-thinking of some of the great epics of the western tradition from Dante, to Milton, Cowper, and Wordsworth. Niehaus’s insights that re-illuminate these epics are brought to bear on living the Christian life as ‘sub-creators’ (to use Tolkien’s term) under orders from God. Niehaus succeeds in encouraging readers simultaneously to re-read the great epics in the light of God’s glory and to live to the glory of God.
—Michael E. Travers, Ph.D., Professor of English & Associate Vice President for Institutional Effectiveness, Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary