Wednesday, May 9, 2018

The Book: A History of the Bible Hardcover 1 by Christopher De Hamel (Phaidon Press)



This is an excellent, comprehensive, and scholarly work. Highly recommend for people who have a passing OR avid interest in written Bible origins. The author produced a work void of hyperbola, opinion, or prejudice, but not lacking in formal, exquisite, and accurate research which provides the reader an advantage as to how to interpret the author's revealing facets about this incredible subject. The pictorials showing various Bible printings - or writings by scribes - is impressive and helps to enable an open mind a way to learn about how the Bible and its sources have survived, overcome, and surpassed the thousands of years that have seen the destruction of hundreds of civilizations including respective written works. And yet, many of history's written works serve to prove the efficacy of the written Word of God. This is one of those kinds of works that is quietly amazing.

In this sumptuous feast for the eyes and mind, de Hamel, former manager of the Western Manuscripts department at Sotheby's, London, and author of A History of Illuminated Manuscripts, deals not with theological content but with the Bible as an artifact. Presented here in exquisite, full-color reproductions are the many forms in which the Bible has appeared over the centuries. Rather than opening with a discussion of the Hebrew and Greek texts (which he saves for Chapter 2), de Hamel relates a history of the texts and manuscripts of Latin Bibles. This organization makes sense, as Saint Jerome's seminal Latin translation, the Vulgate, became the blueprint for the modern Bible. The rest of the book covers the giant Bibles of the Middle Ages, commentaries on the Bible, portable Bibles of the 13th century, Bible picture books, English Wycliffite Bibles, the Gutenberg Bible, Bibles of the Protestant Reformation, the English and American Bible industry, and missionary Bibles. The final chapter, "The Modern Search for Origins," details modern discoveries such as the Dead Sea Scrolls. Even the bibliography, though not arranged alphabetically but by chapter with the author's running commentary on the sources, is a treasure. By contrast, The Oxford Illustrated History of the Bible (LJ 10/15/01) offers short articles by biblical scholars and covers not only the preservation of the Bible but also interpretations and contemporary theology. Also, its illustrations are mostly black and white. De Hamel's wonderful presentation is highly recommended.

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