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David Bentley Hart
David Bentley Hart with coffee in hand
Hart in 2022
Born1965 (age 58–59)
NationalityAmerican
Education
Occupation(s)writer, philosopher, religious studies scholar, critic, and theologian
Notable workSee bibliography
Awards

Philosophy career
SchoolClassical theism, Neoplatonism, Continental philosophy, Idealism, Vishishtadvaita Vedanta, Sophiology, Eastern Orthodoxy (previously Anglicanism)
InstitutionsUniversity of Notre Dame
ThesisBeauty, Violence, and Infinity: A Question Concerning Christian Rhetoric (1997)
Doctoral advisorRobert Louis Wilken (on dissertation committee)
Main interests
philosophy of mind
Websitedavidbentleyhart.substack.com

David Bentley Hart (born 1965) is an American writer, philosopher, religious studies scholar, critic, and theologian. Reviewers have commented on Hart's baroque prose and provocative rhetoric within Hart's over one thousand essays, reviews, and papers as well as nineteen books (including translations and co-authored works). From a predominantly Anglican family background, Hart became Eastern Orthodox when he was twenty-one. His academic works focus on Christian metaphysics, philosophy of mind, Indian and East Asian religion, Asian languages, classics, and literature as well as a New Testament translation with Yale. Books with wider audiences include The Doors of the Sea, Atheist Delusions, and That All Shall Be Saved. In addition to accolades and book awards, Hart has been criticized as heterodox by a variety of Christian scholars.

Born and raised in Maryland, Hart regularly references his family roots and the Baltimore Orioles in his writing. Starting his study of classical and foreign languages in his local public high school, Hart graduated with a BA in interdisciplinary study from the University of Maryland, completed an MPhil in theology at Cambridge, and earned a PhD in religious studies at the University of Virginia. Hart received the Templeton Fellowship at the University of Notre Dame Institute for Advanced Study in 2015 and organized a conference focused on the philosophy of mind.

Hart's translation of the New Testament was published in 2017 with a second edition in 2023. Four of his books have received awards or book of the year recognitions from the Archbishop of Canterbury, Publishers Weekly, the Times Literary Supplement, and the Catholic Media Association. Hart has written essays on diverse topics such as art, baseball, literature, religion, philosophy, consciousness, problem of evil, apocatastasis, theosis, fairies, film, and politics. His fiction includes The Devil and Pierre Gernet: Stories (2012) as well as two books from 2021: Roland in Moonlight and Kenogaia (A Gnostic Tale). Hart also maintains a subscription newsletter called Leaves in the Wind that features original essays and conversations with other writers, including Rainn Wilson and China Miéville. His friendship and common ground with John Milbank has been noted several times by both thinkers.

Early life

Hart notes that most of his ancestors lived in Maryland for generations since their arrival there in 1634.[1][2][3] Born in Howard County and graduating from Wilde Lake High School in 1982 with classes in Latin and Greek, Hart was a National Merit Scholar.[4] Hart grew up with two older brothers, one by nine years and one by seven, and writes that this "has always made me feel more like a creature of the 1960's and early 1970's than do some of my friends of roughly my age".[5]

Hart writes that "regional pride dictated that the tender souls of schoolchildren be regularly exposed to the works of H. L. Mencken" and that this shaped his own writing style so that he would spend his life "striving to suppress my assassin's smile while heaping one elaborately vituperative subordinate clause atop another".[6] British author and journalist James Mumford wrote in 2014 that, outside the high school curriculum, Hart took up French, German, Spanish, Italian, Russian, and modern Greek. At the University of Maryland, Mumford notes that Hart studied classics, history, world literature, religious studies and philosophy while also learning to read Chinese and Sanskrit. As a teenager, Hart started to read the early church fathers along with contemporary Eastern Orthodox theologians, and Mumford reports that Hart converted to Orthodoxy at the age of twenty-one.[7][8]

Academic career

Hart earned a B.A. in interdisciplinary study from the University of Maryland, a M.Phil. in theology from the University of Cambridge, and a Ph.D. in religious studies from the University of Virginia.[9] He taught at the University of Virginia, the University of St. Thomas (Minnesota), Duke Divinity School, and Loyola College in Maryland. He also served as visiting professor at Providence College where he held the Robert J. Randall Chair in Christian Culture. During the 2014–2015 academic year, Hart was Danforth Chair at Saint Louis University in the Department of Theological Studies. In 2015, he was appointed as Templeton Fellow at the University of Notre Dame Institute for Advanced Study. As part of this Templeton Fellowship work, Hart organized a conference focused on the philosophy of mind.[10] Hart is currently a collaborative scholar in the departments of Theology and German for Notre Dame with research responsibilities and no teaching assignments.[11] His primary areas of research have been philosophical theology, systematics, patristics, classical and continental philosophy, and South and East Asian religion with recent focus on the genealogy of classical and Christian metaphysics, ontology, the metaphysics of the soul, and the philosophy of mind.[12]

Hart has authored eighteen books and produced two translated works. The New Testament: A Translation was published in 2017 with Yale University Press[13][14][15][16] and a 2nd edition in 2023.[17] His translation in collaboration with John R. Betz of Analogia Entis: Metaphysics: Original Structure and Universal Rhythm by Erich Przywara was published in 2014 by Eerdmans.[18] Hart's academic books include The Beauty of the Infinite: The Aesthetics of Christian Truth (Wm. B. Eerdmans, 2003), The Experience of God: Being, Consciousness, Bliss (Yale, 2013),[19] The Hidden and the Manifest: Essays in Theology and Metaphysics (Eerdmans, 2017), That All Shall Be Saved: Heaven, Hell, and Universal Salvation (Yale, 2019), Theological Territories: A David Bentley Hart Digest (Notre Dame Press. 2020),[20] Tradition and Apocalypse: An Essay on the Future of Christian Belief (Baker Academic, 2022),[21] and You Are Gods: On Nature and Supernature (Notre Dame Press, 2022).[22]

Literary writing

Since the late 1990s, Hart has published hundreds of essays on varied subjects including Don Juan, Vladimir Nabokov, Charles Baudelaire, Victor Segalen, Leon Bloy, William Empson, David Jones, The Secret Commonwealth of Elves, Fauns and Fairies (1893), and baseball. These often provocative essays have appeared in First Things (2003 to 2020),[23] The New Atlantis,[24] Commonweal, Aeon, The Wall Street Journal, The New York Times, and many other periodicals. Several of these have shaped future books such as The Doors of the Sea, Roland in Moonlight, and Atheist Delusions: The Christian Revolution and Its Fashionable Enemies (Yale, 2009). Since May 2021, Hart also writes regular essays for his Leaves in the Wind subscription newsletter. This newsletter also features conversations with other writers such as Rainn Wilson, China Miéville, Tariq Goddard, and Salley Vickers.[25][26]

Ed Simon writing for the Los Angeles Review of Books in 2022 said that "Hart is often difficult for some people to categorize" with his "thousands of essays, reviews, and papers" but that "what's agreed upon is that he's wide-ranging and deeply read in his seemingly limitless interests, and loquacious in his refreshingly baroque prose style" as well as "the rare theologian" who can "poetically invoke" beauty with descriptions of color and light.[27] In 2017, Hart was described by Matthew Walther (a columnist at The Week and later founding editor of The Lamp) as "our greatest living essayist".[28] Hart's style has been praised for "its thought and humor and spleen"[29] and called "extremely rude".[30] Martyn Wendell Jones has said of Hart's style that, while it may "constantly verge on the immoderate" and rarely "make a point squarely without infusing a bit of accelerant", what might be seen as "needless indulgence" is also "an act of generosity toward his readership" because "his maximalist impulses ...enable him to consistently generate interest on the level of his individual sentences".[31] His essays often mix humor and critical commentary as with one titled "A Person You Flee at Parties: Donald and the Devil" (about Donald Trump from May 6, 2011, for First Things).[32] Hart's essays sometimes explored the boundaries between different religious traditions as with "Saint Sakyamuni" (2009)[33] or the boundaries of orthodoxy as with "Saint Origen" (2015).[34]

David Bentley Hart and his dog Roland.
David Bentley Hart and Roland, the title character in Roland in Moonlight (2021).

In 2012, The Devil and Pierre Gernet, a collection of his fiction, was released by Eerdmans.[35] Two of his books, A Splendid Wickedness in 2016 and The Dream-Child's Progress in 2017, are collections devoted to popular and literary essays that also include several short stories. His short stories have been described as "Borgesian" and are elaborate metaphysical fables, full of wordplay, allusion, and structural puzzles.[36] Hart added two books to his fiction works in 2021: Roland in Moonlight and Kenogaia (A Gnostic Tale).[37][38][39] His book Roland in Moonlight has a largely autobiographical framework while consisting primarily of dialogs with his dog Roland as well as accounts of his fictional great uncle Aloysius Bentley (1895-1987). Hart had written previously about both Roland and Aloysius in essays for First Things, with two about Aloysius 2011 and six about Roland from 2014 to 2016. Reviewing Roland in Moonlight for a review in Church Times, John Saxbee (former Bishop of Lincoln) wrote that "sometimes, a book defies description or, rather, refuses to settle into a conventional genre" and compared Roland in Moonlight to Sophie's World meets Alice through the Looking-Glass or Don Quixote meets The Wind in the Willows.[40]

Reception

Hart's first major work, The Beauty of the Infinite (2003), an adaptation of his doctoral thesis, received acclaim from the theologians John Milbank, Janet Soskice, Paul J. Griffiths, and Reinhard Hütter. William Placher said of the book, "I can think of no more brilliant work by an American theologian in the past ten years".[41] Geoffrey Wainwright said, "This magnificent and demanding volume should establish David Bentley Hart, around the world no less than in North America, as one of his generation's leading theologians".[42] In 2020, Theological Territories: A David Bentley Hart Digest was named Best Religion Book of the Year by Publishers Weekly[43] as well as winning Gold in the 2020 INDIES with Foreword Magazine.[44] On May 27, 2011, Hart's book Atheist Delusions was awarded the Michael Ramsey Prize in Theology by the Archbishop of Canterbury, Rowan Williams.[45][46] It was also praised by the agnostic philosopher Anthony Kenny in The Times Literary Supplement: "Hart has the gifts of a good advocate. He writes with clarity and force, and he drives his points home again and again. He exposes his opponents' errors of fact or logic with ruthless precision".[47] Oliver Burkeman, writing in The Guardian in January 2014, praised Hart's book The Experience of God as "the one theology book all atheists really should read".[48] You Are Gods is a 2022 INDIES Finalist with Foreword Magazine.[49]

Roland in Moonlight was chosen by A. N. Wilson as his November 2021 "Book of the Year" for the Times Literary Supplement. Wilson described this "dialogue with the author's dog Roland, who turns out to be a philosopher of mind, with a particular bee in his bonnet about the inadequacy of materialist explanations for 'consciousness'" as "probably the dottiest book of the year" while noting that "I KEEP returning to it".[50][51] In 2022, the Catholic Media Association awarded a first place prize to Kenogaia (A Gnostic Tale) in the category of "Escapism" for authors from other traditions.[52][53]

Criticism and heterodoxy questions

In addition to these accolades, Hart has been criticized by some scholars. New Testament scholar and translator N. T. Wright challenged Hart's translation of the New Testament in January 2018.[54][55] Hart responded on a few of the points, including on the Eclectic Orthodoxy blog and with his essay "The Spiritual Was More Substantial Than the Material for the Ancients" in Notre Dame's Church Life Journal.[56][57] Peter Leithart wrote a critical response to Hart's book That All Shall Be Saved called "Good God?" in October 2019 and posted a response from Hart five days later.[58][59] Edward Feser claimed in April 2022 that Hart's book You Are Gods: On Nature and Supernature advocates pantheism.[60] Gerald McDermott criticized Hart's book Tradition and Apocalypse in July 2022 for "a gnostic reading of Genesis and heterodox views of Christology, creation, and salvation".[61][62] In late 2022 and early 2023, Fr. James Dominic Rooney wrote several articles for Church Life Journal (with the McGrath Institute for Church Life at the University of Notre Dame) that accused Hart of multiple heresies related to his books That All Shall Be Saved and You Are Gods.[63] Hart responded to Rooney in an interview on the podcast Grace Saves All with David Artman as well as briefly on his Leaves in the Wind subscription newsletter.[64][65]

Although there are accusations of heterodoxy from some of Hart's Christian critics, especially after his 2019 publication of That All Shall Be Saved, a variety of prominent Christian scholars with strong commitments to traditional Christianity praised the book. Roman Catholic scholar Robert Louis Wilken wrote that "in this original and lively book, Hart shows, why most Christian thinking about eternal damnation is unbiblical", and Orthodox Christian scholar John Behr described the book as "a brilliant treatment — exegetically, theologically, and philosophically — of the promise that, in the end, all will indeed be saved, and exposing the inadequacy — above all moral — of claims to the contrary".[66] Archbishop Alexander Golitzin of the Orthodox Church in America recorded a public interview on January 14, 2022, in which he named Hart's book That All Shall Be Saved and said that it "draws upon some very prominent and worthy and holy teachers" in the early church who held that the "love of God will ultimately overcome the capacity of the creature to say no to God". The archbishop went on to clarify that "we can't teach universal salvation as doctrine, but we can hope for it" which Golitzin identified as "my own attitude ...which I take from Metropolitan Kallistos Ware".[67]

In February 2022, the Greek Orthodox Archdiocese of America (in collaboration with the Orthodox Christian Studies Center of Fordham University) invited Hart to deliver a public homily for the Sunday of the Publican & the Pharisee as part of their "Orthodox Scholars Preach" series.[68] In 2017, Hart served on a special commission of Orthodox theologians for the Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew I of Constantinople to help compose "For the Life of the World: Toward a Social Ethos of the Orthodox Church" and to coauthor the preface.[69]

Influences

Hart has cited a wide variety of inspirations and influences in his writing as well as across his various areas of scholarship in religious studies, philosophy of mind, and Christian metaphysics. With his essay style, Hart has often referenced H. L. Mencken as an influence. As literary influences, Hart and others have noted Lewis Carroll and Kenneth Grahame.[70][71] As "exemplars" in writing English prose, Hart has noted: Robert Louis Stevenson, Sylvia Townsend Warner, J. A. Baker, Patrick Leigh Fermor, and Vladimir Nabokov.[72]

An Anglican convert to Eastern Orthodoxy, Hart has praised Orthodox thinkers such as Kallistos Ware, Alexander Schmemann, John Meyendorff, and Olivier Clément.[73] Hart has also called Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew "one of the hopes of Orthodoxy"[74] and Sergei Bulgakov "the greatest systematic theologian of the twentieth century".[75][76] Hart has expressed his admiration for sophiology and summarized his own understanding of it in his 2010 foreword to Vladimir Solovyov's Justification of the Good. Among American theologians, Hart has called Robert Jenson the theologian with whom it is "most profitable to struggle".[77] Among contemporary thinkers, Hart's friendship and substantial intellectual common ground with John Milbank has been noted several times by both thinkers.[78]

More broadly, Hart and commentators have noted many other influences and inspirations (some of whom Hart can also criticize severely in certain respects). Among New Testament authors, Hart most frequently references Paul.[79] Greek fathers most often referenced by Hart include Gregory of Nyssa, Isaac of Nineveh, Maximus the Confessor, and Symeon the New Theologian. Among medieval thinkers, Eriugena, Meister Eckhart and Nicholas of Cusa are often extolled by Hart, especially in his 2022 book You Are Gods. Among more recent Christian thinkers, Hart has noted a high regard for George MacDonald. Russian religious philosophers such as Vladimir Solovyov and Nikolai Berdyaev are often praised by Hart along with Russian literary figures like Dostoevsky and Tolstoy. Among Indian religious philosophers, Hart has most regularly referenced Ramanuja and Shankara.[80][81]

Main interests and key ideas

As indicated by the wide range of topics covered in his essays, Hart has diverse interests such as baseball, Comparative religious studies, Gnosticism, metaphysics, The Dreaming, philosophy of mind, theological aesthetics, and world literature.[82] Hart writes often about fairies and has commented several times about his belief in them[83][84][85] and related creatures such as mermaids.[86]

Monism

As an outspoken advocate of classical theism as seen, for example, in his book The Experience of God[87] who is also, more generally, engaged with the schools of continental philosophy, idealism, and neoplatonism,[88] Hart also affirms monism. He said in a 17 November 2020 interview about a pre-release reading of his book You Are Gods that "at the end of the day, I'm a monist as any sane person is" and that "we can play games with it, but any metaphysics that is coherent is ultimately reducible to a monism".[89] In the text of You Are Gods, Hart describes variations of both dualism and monism that he calls grim and monstrous:

An absolute dualism, of course, is a very grim thing indeed; but a narrative monism unqualified by any hint of true gnostic detachment, irony, sedition, or doubt—by any proper sense, that is, that the fashion of this world is horribly out of joint, that we are prisoners of delusion, that not every evil can be accounted for as part of divine necessity—turns out to be at least as monstrous.

During an April 2022 conversation with Hart about You Are Gods, John Milbank said we "agree that in fact neoplatonism and Vedanta and Islamic mysticism are monistic" and "that, actually, an emanationism, a monotheism, these are actually the more monistic visions and that, if we've got all these things in Christianity like Trinity, incarnation, grace and deification and so on, these aren't qualifying monism". Instead, Milbank said that Hart's book You Are Gods shows that Christianity is spelling out or expounding monism and monotheism.[90]

Universalism

Hart's book That All Shall Be Saved was published on September 24, 2019, and makes the case that universalism is the only coherent version of the Christian faith. Although grounded primarily in arguments from Christian metaphysics and moral philosophy, the book also considers biblical exegesis, systematic theology, and historical theology (with extensive references to universalist ideas among Christian patristic figures such as Gregory of Nyssa). Hart, with his characteristic rhetorical provocations, uses terms such as "infernalists" to describe his opponents.[91][92][93] This grounding in Christian metaphysics, insistence on universalism being the only true articulation of the Christian gospel, and use of combative rhetoric all combine to make Hart's case for universalism more uncompromising than most previous Christian arguments, and this has led to the use of the term "hard universalism" to describe Hart's position.[94]

Atemporal fall

Hart refers to the idea of an atemporal fall (also called meta-historical fall) in his 2005 book The Doors of the Sea as well as in "The Devil's March: Creatio ex Nihilo, the Problem of Evil, and a Few Dostoyevskian Meditations":

The fall of rational creation and the conquest of the cosmos by death is something that appears to us nowhere within the course of nature or history; it comes from before and beyond both. We cannot search it out within the closed totality of the damaged world because it belongs to another frame of time, another kind of time, one more real than the time of death. ...It may seem a fabulous claim that we exist in the long grim aftermath of a primeval catastrophe—that this is a broken and wounded world, that cosmic time is a phantom of true time, that we live in an umbratile interval between creation in its fullness and the nothingness from which it was called, and that the universe languishes in bondage to the "powers" and "principalities" of this age, which never cease in their enmity toward the kingdom of God—but it is not a claim that Christians are free to surrender.[95]

Hart has recommended Sergei Bulgakov's 1939 book The Bride of the Lamb as the best exposition of an atemporal fall.[96]

Personal life

Hart is married and has one grown son, Patrick,[97] with whom he co-wrote the children's book The Mystery of Castle MacGorilla (Angelico Press, 2019). Hart's wife is British and had a toy sheep named Beauchamp Cholmondeley Featherstonhaugh.[98] He has two brothers: Addison Hodges Hart (also an author)[99][100] and Fr. Robert Hart (rector of Saint Benedict's Anglican Catholic Church in Chapel Hill, NC).[101]

Hart currently lives in South Bend, Indiana and is asked to serve and contribute by leaders in his Orthodox tradition such as the Ecumenical Patriarch of Constantinople.[102][103] He follows contemporary concerns in Orthodox Christianity such as the "Russian World" (Russkii Mir) teaching.[104] During a September 16, 2022 conversation with Rainn Wilson, Hart shared briefly about an "indescribable" past experience of his own on Mount Athos:

I was in this state of spiritual despair, and I also had an encounter. ...So I understand both the difficulty of explaining it and the impossibility of forgetting it, at once, and how it can change your life. But it doesn't come as a set of instructions. It sure as hell didn't turn me into a saint but did actually make me realize that the spiritual dimension of reality is reality.[105]

Hart is a Christian socialist and a democratic socialist and has been a member of the Democratic Socialists of America.[106][107][108] On August 8, 2020, Hart wrote:

I'm basically an anarchist and communalist. I believe that all that lilies of the field nonsense that Jesus preached was more than a daydream; and I think the longing for strict social hierarchy ...as an antidote to modernity is simply a longing for a reprise of the same sins that created modernity.[109]

With a few more specifics, Hart wrote on April 3, 2022:

In my heart of hearts, I want to vote for someone whose entire political philosophy is derived from John Ruskin by way of Kenneth Grahame, with lashings of William Cobbett, Gilbert White, and William Morris; failing that, I want to enjoy the luxury of writing in Wendell Berry on every ballot. But the imminent collapse of the civil order of the entire world doth make pragmatists of us all. I long for the day, however, when I can return to my posture of airily insouciant disdain for the whole system and can again cast votes only for hopeless third party candidates with a clear conscience. But I suspect I will die before that day comes.[110]

References

  1. ^ "Thoughts In and Out of Season 4". Leaves in the Wind (David Bentley Hart). 15 January 2023. Archived from the original on 20 January 2023. Retrieved 6 March 2023. No branch of the clan on either side managed to stretch out very far past the boundaries of Maryland between my forebears' arrival there in 1634 and the late 1970's... Well, apart from the Warfields, that is, on my mother's side, who spread out into Virginia and Pennsylvania, and whose most famous (or infamous) daughter, Wallis, became first Wallis Simpson and then Wallis Duchess of Windsor and who was, in consequence of the latter, indirectly responsible for Elizabeth II's reign of 70 years... But I am getting off track (and generally we do not boast about our distant relation to that particular Nazi-sympathizer).
  2. ^ "The Abbot and Aunt Susie". First Things. 3 December 2010. Archived from the original on 8 December 2022. Retrieved 6 March 2023.
  3. ^ "The Greatest Nation on Earth". First Things. 17 September 2010. Archived from the original on 25 December 2022. Retrieved 6 March 2023. My remotest ancestors on this continent settled in Maryland in 1634, as titled freeholders under the sheltering canopy of a royal charter.
  4. ^ "National Merit Scholarship Honored". The Washington Post. September 29, 1982. ISSN 0190-8286. Archived from the original on 15 April 2017. Retrieved April 19, 2018.
  5. ^ "Thoughts In and Out of Season 4". Leaves in the Wind. 15 January 2023. ISSN 0190-8286. Archived from the original on 20 January 2023. Retrieved 7 March 2023.
  6. ^ "Addenda et Notanda". Leaves in the Wind (David Bentley Hart). 26 August 2022. Archived from the original on 13 January 2023. Retrieved 17 January 2023. Regional pride dictated that the tender souls of schoolchildren be regularly exposed to the works of H. L. Mencken.
  7. ^ "The Brilliant David Bentley Hart". James Mumford. 13 May 2014. Archived from the original on 30 June 2022. Retrieved 6 March 2023.
  8. ^ "Addenda et Notanda". Leaves in the Wind (David Bentley Hart). 26 August 2022. Archived from the original on 13 January 2023. Retrieved 17 January 2023. [Kallistos Ware's] two most famous and influential books came early in his public career: The Orthodox Church (1963) and The Orthodox Way (1979). Neither has ever gone out of print. The latter was especially important to me when I read it in my teens. I had encountered the writings of the Eastern fathers by that point, but had not yet ever heard anyone speak of Orthodoxy in an idiom intelligible to my Anglican ears.
  9. ^ "David Bentley Hart to Speak at Benedictine College". Benedictine College. 14 March 2014. Archived from the original on 29 July 2020. Retrieved 17 January 2023.
  10. ^ "David Bentley Hart To Lead Colloquium On "Mind, Soul, World: Consciousness In Nature"". University of Notre Dame News. 22 February 2016. Archived from the original on 4 August 2020. Retrieved 16 January 2023. {{cite web}}: |archive-date= / |archive-url= timestamp mismatch; 30 December 2022 suggested (help)
  11. ^ "David Bentley Hart: Commentary on the Liberal Arts, Civilization, and the Future of Christianity". ClassicalU. 1 December 2022. Archived from the original on 7 January 2023. Retrieved 17 January 2023.
  12. ^ "David Bentley Hart". University of Notre Dame Institute for Advanced Study. 26 July 2017. Archived from the original on 1 December 2022. Retrieved 17 January 2023.
  13. ^ "Description of The New Testament: A Translation". Yale UP. 1 December 2017. Archived from the original on 27 June 2022. Retrieved 16 January 2023.
  14. ^ de Lang, Marike H (14 September 2022). "David Bentley Hart's New Testament Translation". The Bible Translator. 73 (2): 181–190. doi:10.1177/20516770211039495. S2CID 252216286.
  15. ^ Berneking, Steve (14 September 2022). "What's New About David Bentley Hart's Translation of the New Testament; Assessing its Translation Effectiveness and Affectiveness". The Bible Translator. 73 (2): 191–202. doi:10.1177/20516770221108341. S2CID 252216285.
  16. ^ Ebojo, Edgar Battad (14 September 2022). "The 'Ideal Version of the Text': A Text-Critical Review of the Greek Text Behind David Bentley Hart's New Testament". The Bible Translator. 73 (2): 203–212. doi:10.1177/20516770221108461. S2CID 252216278.
  17. ^ "Description of The New Testament: A Translation (Second Edition)". Yale UP. 27 September 2022. Archived from the original on 27 September 2022. Retrieved 16 January 2023. {{cite web}}: |archive-date= / |archive-url= timestamp mismatch; 25 September 2022 suggested (help)
  18. ^ "David Bentley Hart". Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing Company. 26 July 2016. Archived from the original on 4 December 2022. Retrieved 17 January 2023.
  19. ^ "The Spirit of the Text". Yale University Press. 3 November 2017. Archived from the original on 30 September 2022. Retrieved 17 January 2023.
  20. ^ "Theological Territories". Notre Dame Press. 12 February 2020. Archived from the original on 5 December 2022. Retrieved 17 January 2023.
  21. ^ "David Bentley Hart". Baker Academic Press. 12 February 2022. Archived from the original on 18 January 2023. Retrieved 17 January 2023.
  22. ^ "You Are Gods". Notre Dame Press. 12 April 2022. Archived from the original on 1 December 2022. Retrieved 17 January 2023.
  23. ^ "Featured Authors". First Things. Archived from the original on 2018-07-29. Retrieved 2018-07-29.
  24. ^ "David Bentley Hart". The New Atlantis. 20 July 2008. Archived from the original on 12 January 2023. Retrieved 17 January 2023.
  25. ^ "An Introduction to Leaves in the Wind". Leaves in the Wind (David Bentley Hart). 1 July 2021. Archived from the original on 1 July 2021. Retrieved 17 January 2023.
  26. ^ "Leaves in the Wind (YouTube channel)". Leaves in the Wind (YouTube channel of David Bentley Hart). 16 September 2022. Archived from the original on 27 November 2022. Retrieved 17 January 2023.
  27. ^ Simon, Ed (24 July 2022). "All Dogs Go to Heaven: David Bentley Hart's Canine Panpsychism". Los Angeles Review of Books. Archived from the original on 15 December 2022. Retrieved 13 March 2023. Author of thousands of essays, reviews, and papers, as well as 15 books including Atheist Delusions: The Christian Revolution and Its Fashionable Enemies, The Experience of God: Being, Consciousness, Bliss, as well as That All Shall Be Saved: Heaven, Hell, and Universal Salvation, not to mention an immaculate translation of the New Testament, Hart is often difficult for some people to categorize. What's agreed upon is that he's wide-ranging and deeply read in his seemingly limitless interests, and loquacious in his refreshingly baroque prose style; the rare theologian who can poetically invoke the 'glow of a gibbous moon set high in the sky, shining like a polished white opal on a bed of indigo velvet' or how a 'strong breeze was stirring the leaves in the high trees enclosing the grounds, and was shaking the branches of the lilac and oleander bushes bordering the path to the door ... ripples of silver ... coursing continually through the lawn's broad blades of fescue grass'.
  28. ^ "The Prospero of Theologians". The Washington Free Beacon. 24 March 2017. Archived from the original on 2018-07-29. Retrieved 2018-07-28.
  29. ^ "Review: David Bentley Hart's 'Splendid Wickedness'". Chicago Tribune. 18 August 2016. Archived from the original on 19 August 2016. Retrieved 2018-07-28. Hart's acuity on this theme aside, I welcome 'A Splendid Wickedness' for its thought and humor and spleen.
  30. ^ "A Mind-Bending Translation of the New Testament". The Atlantic. 10 December 2017. Archived from the original on 29 July 2018. Retrieved 2018-07-28. He rehearses this argument in numberless witty variations against whichever non-God ideology happens to slouch beneath his pen. ...Unlike Chesterton—and this is how you know he's an early-21st-century guy, someone with Wi-Fi—Hart is extremely rude.
  31. ^ "Martyn Wendell Jones – Essay on Two New David Bentley Hart Books". The Englewood Review of Books. 27 October 2017. Archived from the original on 29 July 2018. Retrieved 2018-07-29. This note of self-aware hyperbole points to an essential part of the Hart persona; his writing voice is that of someone confident in his genius to a point of wanton, gleeful provocation. He knows his reader cannot meaningfully oppose him in even his wildest declarations. No one can, when he is writing in the Imperial mode. [From page 2:] The judgments that Hart renders constantly verge on the immoderate, and rarely does he make a point squarely without infusing a bit of accelerant. Under one aspect this habit is a needless indulgence, but under another, it's an act of generosity toward his readership. He has the good sense to pursue his maximalist impulses, knowing that they will lead him into his natural métier and enable him to consistently generate interest on the level of his individual sentences. [From page 3:] His intuition gallops across the range of human thinking and longing, mapped over decades of wild omnidirectional exploration, in search of examples and illustrations. ...His declarations over the history of ideas are cocksure, as full of gusto as his rages and raptures over cultural ephemera.
  32. ^ "A Person You Flee at Parties: Donald and the Devil". First Things. 6 May 2011. Archived from the original on 3 April 2014. Retrieved 15 January 2023.
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  34. ^ "Saint Origen". First Things. October 2015. Archived from the original on 7 October 2022. Retrieved 22 January 2023.
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  86. ^ David Bentley Hart (2020). "Selkies and Nixies: The Penguin Book of Mermaids". The Lamp: A Catholic Journal of Literature, Science, the Fine Arts, Etc'.' Issue 2. Assumption 2020. pp. 49-50. Quote: "Of course mermaids exist. Or, to be more precise, of course water spirits and magical marine beings of every kind are real and numerous and, in certain circumstances, somewhat dangerous. ...The modern reports of real encounters with mermaids or other water-spirits, such as two from Zimbabwe, one from South Africa, three from northeastern India, and so on ...are so ingenuous, well-attested, and credible that only a brute would refuse to believe them [and] there is a real moral imperative in not dismissing such tales as lies or delusions.
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