<p data-mce-fragment="1" style="text-align: center;" data-mce-style="text-align: center;"><strong data-mce-fragment="1"><em data-mce-fragment="1">“I<span data-mce-fragment="1">f we lose the ability to imagine how words are like seeds, we risk presuming that language cannot serve any purpose greater than our own. If we cannot imagine how human words can communicate self-giving life, then we lose the ability to imagine how Christian faith is possible.”</span>
<p data-mce-fragment="1" style="text-align: center;" data-mce-style="text-align: center;"><strong data-mce-fragment="1"><em data-mce-fragment="1">"synopsis" may belong to another edition of this title.
Phillip J. Donnelly, PhD, is professor of literature in the Honors College at Baylor University, where he teaches in the Great Texts Program and the English Graduate Program and serves as the director of the Great Texts Program. His research focuses on the historical connections between philosophy, theology, and imaginative literature, with particular attention to Renaissance literature and the reception of classical educational traditions. He is the author of <ahttps://amzn.to/3bLXtES>Milton’s Scriptural Reasoning</a> (Cambridge University Press, 2009), and is coeditor, with D. H. Williams, of <https://amzn.to/3qdWJkn>Transformations in Biblical Literary Traditions</a> (University of Notre Dame Press, 2014). He serves on the national council for the Alcuin Fellowship and on the editorial board for Principia: A Journal of Classical Education.
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