Ebook
Why do we tell stories? Why are stories so indigenous to religion? Stories. Sacred stories. The three Western Scriptures express themselves most fully, and deeply, in stories. The original idea of "story" is "inquiry," the "result of research, information, knowledge," "telling, exposition, account, history." Its verb makes verbal these nouns: "to seek to know oneself, inform oneself, do research, inquire," "interrogate," "examine, explore, observe." All history is story. Most Scripture is story. Such stories, all stories, ask for--even demand--attentive listening, interpretation, and reinterpretation. Each of us, therefore, becomes an interpreter, speaking in tongues (so to speak), even if only for herself or himself. The poems here offer such explorations; they take scriptural stories and imagine--and reimagine--them in order to offer the reader different angles and perspectives, new experiences. Such experiences, such perspectives, can help us see the Scriptures, and ourselves, anew.
“These poems invite our presence by their personal reflection on
the events of Scripture. Like the evangelists, Vivian writes
narrative and confessional theology, urging us to join our presents
with those of his speakers and to allow their recollections to give
us new perspective. They are poems of memory as much as
interpretation, embodying events lived by others from long ago with
the help of their, and our, senses. Full of paradox and of
erudition, they reveal the poet’s search to understand the obscure
and to share both the struggle and the tentative understanding he
has tentatively reached. Vivian does not feed his hearers with
easily accessible piety but offers us blood and bread.”
—Marsha L. Dutton, Executive Editor, Cistercian Publications
“Tim Vivian collects stories from Scripture, mostly from the
Gospels, but also from Jewish and Muslim Scriptures, and extends
them into the realm of personal and collective imagination. Using
the framework of Ignatian contemplation, the poems adopt many
voices: the woman taken in adultery, Pilate’s wife, and so become
universal. But the themes of the poems, though rooted in Scripture,
are very much from our own times and speak to our anxieties,
sorrows, and joys.”
—Lawrence Morey, OCSO, Catholic priest
Tim Vivian is Professor Emeritus of Religious Studies at
California State University Bakersfield and a retired Episcopal
priest. He received three degrees in literature before an
interdisciplinary PhD from UC Santa Barbara and an MDiv from Church
Divinity School of the Pacific (Episcopal), and was a post-doctoral
fellow at Yale Divinity School. In 2018 he received an honorary DD
degree from Church Divinity School of the Pacific. He has published
numerous books, articles, and book reviews on early Christian
monasticism.