The King James Bible: An Overview

The King James Bible: An Overview
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This is a past event

The University of Aberdeen is hosting a public lecture series to commemorate the 400th anniversary of the publication of the King James Bible.

The King James Bible was always more than a Bible - a way of communicating with and relating to God - it was a fiercely political text, enmeshed in power relations that spoke also to relations between monarchs and subjects.

It emerged within a particular context of previous translations but also in a social and historical universe and had particular resonances with Scotland.

 It has been applauded for its wider literary contributions but criticised also as a savage text.

The series of six lectures is designed to explore the influence of this landmark text not only in theology but on politics, law, literature, history and sociology.

The lecturers are amongst the world's chief specialists and the series will begin with Professor Alister McGrath on March 1. The Rev Professor McGrath is Head of the Centre for Theology, Religion and Culture at King's College London and is a well known speaker and writer on such topics as religion and science, the ‘new atheism’ and the renewal of theology. He is also a prodigious author of many leading texts, including In the Beginning: The Story of the King James Bible (Doubleday, 2001).

He will begin the six-part lecture series, organised byProfessor John Brewer, Head of the Department of Sociology at the University,with an overview of the King James Bible.

Professor Brewer said:  “The King James Bible may be 400 years old but is very much alive today. It wrote about the heart of God but also very practically spoke into local disputes in England, Scotland and Ireland, as well as national and international affairs.

“It always was - and remains - more than a Bible. It is what the sociologist Peter Berger would call a 'sacred canopy' hanging over politics, society, law, literature, language and culture.

“The contribution of the King James Bible in all these fields needs celebration as well as retrospective assessment. This is the purpose of the public lecture series, honouring the 400th anniversary of the King James Bible but placing it in a wider context.”

The series will continue on March 15 with Dr Eyal Poleg, followed by Professor David Fergusson on March 29, Professor Naomi Tadmor on April 11, Professor Adrian Thatcher on May 4 and concluding with Professor Gordon Campbell on May 12.

All lectures will take place at 6.30pm in King's College Conference Centre at the University of Aberdeen.