2010
DOI: 10.1177/106385121001900306
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The Bible in Captivity: Hobbes, Spinoza, and the Politics of Defining Religion

Abstract: Asad explains, "During the period [early Middle Ages] the very term religious was therefore reserved for those living in monastic communities; with the later emergence of nonmonastic orders, the term came to be used for all who had taken lifelong vows by which they were set apart from the ordinary members of the Church" (39n22). Writing further, he mentions, "For medieval Christians, religion was not a universal phenomenon: religion was a site on which universal truth was produced, and it was clear to them tha… Show more

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Cited by 6 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…22 Hobbes' work on history and specifically biblical interpretation is best contextualized within the events of the Thirty Years' War and the English Civil War. 23 Hobbes believed that religious factions had played a central part in these conflicts. Thus, Hobbes sought a new biblical hermeneutic that would yield a new exegesis, one which could serve the state and thus would serve as a herald of peace.…”
Section: IImentioning
confidence: 99%
“…22 Hobbes' work on history and specifically biblical interpretation is best contextualized within the events of the Thirty Years' War and the English Civil War. 23 Hobbes believed that religious factions had played a central part in these conflicts. Thus, Hobbes sought a new biblical hermeneutic that would yield a new exegesis, one which could serve the state and thus would serve as a herald of peace.…”
Section: IImentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The German biblical scholarship that produced a ‘higher anti‐Semitism’, as Solomon Schechter once called it, was an unfortunate byproduct of a much deeper political program whose main opponent was actually the Catholic Church, and particularly the papacy . The long march to the birth of centralized modern European states in the seventeenth century coincided with the advent of modern biblical criticism . Thus, it should come as no surprise that some of the same figures involved in justifying modern centralized states, and thus modern politics – Hobbes, Spinoza, and John Locke – were also important figures in forging modern biblical criticism…”
Section: Modernist Crisismentioning
confidence: 99%