Wandering lost in a wild land on Christmas Eve, Sir Gawain prayed, “I beg of you, O Lord, and Mary, that most merciful of mothers, and most dear, find me safe lodgings in some house, devoutly to hear Mass, and then your matins tomorrow morning. I meekly ask you, and to this purpose I promptly pray my Pater and my Ave, and Creed.”
Last week we looked at the fourteenth century poem Sir Gawain and the Green Knight from a literary point of view. Our college president Dr. Glenn Arbery helped us understand the story, its structure, and its context.
But the anonymous author of the tale about Sir Gawain was interested in more than telling a good story. He had a clear theological and spiritual purpose as well. Sir Gawain and the Green Knight is an intensely Christian poem. To help us understand how that’s the case, our guest this week is theologian Dr. Kent Lasnoski.
Arithmetic, Murder, and Redemption in Dostoevsky's Crime and Punishment with Dr. Thaddeus Kozinski
Gothic Cathedrals: The Architecture of Contemplation with Dr. Jason Baxter
Sacred Signs: On the Physical Side of Being Spiritual with Dr Kent Lasnoski
The Pope, Authority, and “Religious Assent” with Dr. Jeremy Holmes
Paradise Lost: A Conversation with Dr. Glenn Arbery
The Roots of Philosophy: Theories about Everything
Silence and Sacred Space
Evil Enchantment and The Weight of Glory: What Dante Taught C.S. Lewis about Poetry with Dr. Jason Baxter
Euclid and the Beauty of Numbers with Dr. Scott Olsson
Introduction to "The Great Books" with Dr. Thaddeus Kozinski
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