From Publishers WeeklyStarred Review. In this
brilliant account, Wheaton College literature professor Jacobs (
The
Narnian) traces the idea of original sin from the Bible to the present day.
The doctrine has inspired fierce debate for the last two millennia. In every
generation, it seems, someone defends the doctrine, pointing to all manner of
evidence that people are (as Jacobs, in one of his rare stylistic lapses, too
cutely puts it) bad to the bone. Their opponents in turn ridicule the notion,
noting the unfettered greatness of human potential. Thus Augustine tangles with
Julian of Eclanum, and John Wesley clashes with Rousseau. It is a compliment to
Jacobs that in his hands these abstruse theological disputes are utterly
engrossing. Jacobs makes clear that he has a dog in this fight—he thinks
original sin is the most persuasive explanation of the world he lives in (though
he dissents, irenically and charitably, from some classic Christian
formulations, such as Augustine's view on infant damnation). Jacobs hazards some
quirky and intriguing ideas, such as the notion that the kind of kinship created
by a universal doctrine of original sin is perhaps as good a basis as any for a
brotherhood and sisterhood of humanity, in which no one lords it over anyone
else. This book is truly sui generis.
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Review"With extraordinary erudition and just enough lightness
of touch to leaven the lump, Alan Jacobs traces the tangled ways that we have
tried to think about human cussedness. --
Frederick Buechner, author of
Secrets in the DarkA brilliantly illuminating, deeply
thought-provoking intellectual journey. --
BooklistA deep pool of
wisdom . . . an expression of what’s wrong with all of us. Jacobs’ prose often
sings . . . Careful when you open this book--it could keep you up at nights. --
Christianity TodayA strangely entertaining cultural survey . . .
--
The Wall Street JournalJacobs’s discussion is terrifically
worthwhile for exposing how the idea of "evil," as enunciated iwthin the
doctrine, undergoes permutations and translations over time --
BN.comReplete with examples drawn from a number of different
cultural expressions, including literature, film, and philosophy, [Original Sin]
is intended to introduce a broad genearl audience to the complexity of
explaining how human beings act evilly toward one another. --
Library
JournalSplendid...a book endeavoring to help us say and do something
about the sin which so easily ensares. . . Strikingly, Jacobs argues that the
‘confraternity’ of humanity is best grounded not in our being made in the image
of God but in our being made sinful in Adam. --
Books & Culture
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all Editorial Reviews