List of Illustrations vi
List of Maps xii
Acknowledgments xiii
Preface xiv
Prelude: Flesh and Word 1
1 The Christian Movement in the Second and Third Centuries 10
2 Inclusions and Exclusions: The Fourth Century 65
3 Fleshing Out the Word: Medieval Christianity East and West 115
4 The Voice of the Pages: Incarnation and Hierarchy in the
Medieval West 147
Interlude 184
5 Death and the Body in the Fourteenth-century West 186
6 The Suffering Body of Christ: The Fifteenth Century 224
7 Reforming the Body of Christ: The Sixteenth Century, Part I 247
8 Reforming the Body of Christ: The Sixteenth Century, Part II 291
9 Rationalism and Religious Passion: The Seventeenth Century 325
10 Keeping Body and Soul Together: Eighteenth-century
Christianity 359
Postlude: The Word Made Flesh 390
Bibliography 392
Index 414
Margaret R. Miles is Emeritus Professor of Historical Theology at the Graduate Theological Union, Berkeley. As Bussey Professor of Theology, she taught the history of Christian thought for 20 years at Harvard University Divinity School. Her previous books include Plotinus on Body and Beauty (Blackwell, 1999), Reading for Life (1996), Seeing and Believing (1996), Desire and Delight (1993), Practicing Christianity (1988), and Carnal Knowing (1988).
"Margaret Miles', The Word Made Flesh, is a monumental work, the
fruit of decades of her teaching and scholarship. The particular
contributions of this volume are recognition of the importance of
art, architecture and music and the integration of new scholarship
on women in Christian intellectual history. This work will become
indispensable for introductory courses on western Christian thought
from Justin Martyr to Kant."
Rosemary Radford Ruether, Graduate Theological Union
"To the student of Christianity, Miles offers something truly rare
- a history text that is hard to put down."
Kathleen Sands, University of Massachusetts
"Margaret Miles gives us a picture of the whole thinking,
breathing, gendered ecclesial body. The history of Christian
thought and the social and cultural history of Christians cannot,
after Miles, be readily chronicled apart from one another. Attempts
to do so will likely be found wanting in comparison with this
monumental work."
William McDonald, Tennessee Wesleyan College
“Miles’ insistence on exploring the history of Christian thought
beyond texts and quotations makes the book invaluable; she may well
have established the new paradigm for teaching, requiring one to
not only read through Christian thought, but to listen and to see
the development of Christian thought as well.”
Reviews in Religion and Theology
"Miles succeeds on every level and the books should be used widely
in introductory courses."
Reviews in Religion and Theology
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