From Christianity Today-
The metaphors we use in given situations show us more about our
assumptions than we often realize. In politics, we speak of the “arena,”
our “opponents,” or even “battle lines.” Our language betrays a hostile
environment filled with warring parties. When we discuss education, we
may refer to “values,” “costs,” or “benefits,” revealing economics as
our lens for assessing learning.
The title of Richard Harries’s book, Haunted by Christ: Modern Writers and the Struggle for Faith,
revolves around two contrasting metaphors for writers and religion. On
the one hand, Christ is scary, unpursued, and ephemeral, haunting
writers like a ghost. In the subtitle, though, the writers are active
agents wrestling with an unknown entity, like Jacob with the angel, for
the prize of faith. Harries explores both types of artists in his book,
those who flee religion and those who chase it. He focuses primarily on
those who lived in the 20th century, starting with 19th-century novelist
Fyodor Dostoevsky and ending with modern writer Marilynne Robinson.
More here-
https://www.christianitytoday.com/ct/2019/january-web-only/haunted-by-christ-writers-richard-harries.html
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