
Unutterable Love
The Passionate Life and Preaching of F.W. Robertson
Christina Beardsley(Author)
Lutterworth Press
Published on 25. September 2009
Book
Paperback/Softback
460 pages
978-0-7188-9210-4 (ISBN)
Description
This biography is an account of the intellectual development of the early Victorian Romantic preacher Frederick William Robertson, a devotee of Dante, Goethe, Byron, Shelley, Coleridge, Wordsworth and Carlyle, and an admirer of German theology. His receptiveness to the School of Schleiermacher, along with his natural ability of popularizing the doctrines of liberal theology, contributed to the success of Robertson's sermons and posthumously published writings. His work helped to validate the reasonableness of Christian belief and the validity of spiritual experience and feelings for his contemporaries. The elopement of Robertson's mother, the odd circumstances surrounding his own marriage, and his own extra-marital affair are some of the key details uncovered here. In this book Christina Beardsley outlines the leading ideas of the priest's theology and preaching as well as of his extraordinary thinking with regard to gender. Gender is in fact one of the recurring themes in this biography. Robertson's way of perceiving femininity and experiencing his own masculinity reflects the Victorian gender debate and the Romantic preoccupation with the reconciliation of opposites. A captivating reconstruction of puzzling episodes of Robertson's life where the author explores the gendered aspects of his thought and places new emphasis on his Romantic sensibility. This book would appeal to students of Victorian religion and culture; XIX century biographies; the faith/reason, doubt/belief and science/religion debates; German influence on English theology; aesthetics and theology; the history of English liberal theology; gender and culture.
Reviews / Votes
'In this meticulously researched and psychologically penetrating reconstruction of the life, thought and identity of nineteenth-century British clergyman Frederick William Robertson, Christina Beardsley introduces us to an individual upon whom the religious, philosophical and existential anxieties of the Victorian age converged. [...] the study will remind students of gender that the priority of religious modes of thought in nineteenth-century Britain necessitates a deep engagement with issues of theological complexity without which we cannot properly reconstruct the equally intricate manifestations of human sexual identities.'Martin Spence, Theology and Sexuality, Vol. 18, No.2, 2012
More details
Language
English
Place of publication
Cambridge
United Kingdom
Publishing group
James Clarke & Co Ltd
Dimensions
Height: 234 mm
Width: 156 mm
Weight
690 gr
ISBN-13
978-0-7188-9210-4 (9780718892104)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Person
Christina Beardsley has worked in pastoral ministry in the Church of England for three decades and is Head of Multi-Faith Chaplaincy at the Chelsea & Westminster Hospital, London. She has a special interest in the interplay between theology and the arts, and has extensively researched Victorian religion and theology.
Content
Preface; Acknowledgements; Illustrations; Introduction; 'Vanity Fair' (1816-1837); 'Loss and Gain' (1837-1840); 'Heroes and Hero Worship' (1840-1841); 'Aids to Reflection' (1841-1846); 'Confessions of an Inquiring Spirit' (1846); 'Yeast' (1847-1848); 'Elective Affinities' (1849); 'Phases of Faith' (1850); 'Companions of my Solitude' (1851); 'Cathechism Positiviste' (1852); 'Legends of the Madonna' (1853); 'The Life and Letters of F.W. Robertson' (1865); 'The Sermons of F.W. Robertson' (1855-1880); 'Gender and Sexuality'; 'Robertson's Version of the Catechism'; 'The Texts of Robertson's Brighton Sermons'; Notes; Bibliography; Index.