God the Father, God the Son, Christ as Son Incarnate, Adam as man and thus the Son of God — these complex filial relationships are a distinctive recurring theme in the poetry of John Milton. Comparing the views of Milton with those of Calvin, the Socinians, and the Cambridge Platonists, Hugh Mac Callum presents in this study a new and clearly defined interpretation of Milton’s emphasis on filial freedom and filial growth. After a short review of figures of mediation in the minor poems and Samson Agonistes, Mac Callum turns to the pre-existent Son as he is defined in Milton’s theology and characterized in Paradise Lost. He shows how subtly and effectively the poet dramatizes the growth of the Son to an earned Godhead. Turning to Adam’s sonship, Mac Callum traces the relationship from the innocence in which Adam progressively actualizes the image of God, through the Fall, to the ultimate restoration of sonship. The final chapters deal with the Incarnate Christ, the mediator who is at once God and man. Throughout, Mac Callum places Milton’s views in the context of Reformed thought and thereby illustrates the originality and uniqueness of the poet’s vision.
Hugh R. MacCallum
Milton and the Sons of God [PDF ebook]
The Divine Image in Milton’s Epic Poetry
Milton and the Sons of God [PDF ebook]
The Divine Image in Milton’s Epic Poetry
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Language English ● Format PDF ● Pages 336 ● ISBN 9781487575878 ● Publisher University of Toronto Press, Scholarly Publishing Division ● Published 1986 ● Downloadable 3 times ● Currency EUR ● ID 6961677 ● Copy protection Adobe DRM
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