The Father of Lights reviewed in Interpretation
“This volume is a marvelous enticement to explore the spiritual uses of creaturely beauty and helps evoke a sense of wonder.”
"'The beauty of holiness' has long been a familiar phrase with a somewhat elusive meaning. With a combination of scholarly precision and infectious relish for the theological task, Junius Johnson gives a new clarity to this phrase. Beauty is interpreted as the manifestation of a sanctity whose fullness we both remember and anticipate as we encounter a world of creatures densely, dazzlingly, and divinely interconnected."
Ben Quash, professor of Christianity and the arts and director of the Centre for Arts and the Sacred, King's College London
"In theological aesthetics the lineaments of Thomistic thought have long been most formative, but now, in this rich, closely argued, and admirably synthetic work of theological aesthetics, Junius Johnson has contributed a powerful adequation of St. Bonaventure's conception of beauty--both as gift from the Father of Lights and as illumination leading back to him. Beauty rightly perceived--that is, in a necessarily subjective appropriation of objective reality--enables a fuller understanding of God, in Bonaventure's term a 'contuition.' We are simultaneously dazzled by beauty in the world and by beauty's Giver. Johnson's thoughtful book, conversing as it does with the likes of von Balthasar, Baudrillard, Barthes, and Ouspensky, is brimming with insight, a remarkably fruitful excursus in philosophical theology in which many will find worthy treasures."
David Lyle Jeffrey, FRSC, distinguished senior fellow, Baylor Institute for Studies in Religion; emeritus distinguished professor of literature and the humanities, Baylor University
"Johnson's work is an illuminating meditation on the experience of beauty and that experience's implications for the world of theology."
Anne M. Carpenter, associate professor of theology, St. Mary's College of California
"Junius Johnson is easily one of the smartest, most creative, most learned theologians of his generation. Johnson controls all the relevant literature, both theological and theoretical. As an artist in his own right, he has an insider's feel for the topic. And he brings a rare combination of intelligence, insight, and perceptiveness to this material. Most of my students will be interested in this book and so will many people I go to church with. I strongly and enthusiastically recommend it."
Kevin W. Hector, associate professor of theology and of the philosophy of religions, University of Chicago Divinity School
"It is rare to find such a lucid, and indeed beautiful, account of the theology of beauty. The terms are well defined, the argument precisely advanced and defended, and the range of reference capacious. It's as though, amid a modern debate that has generated more heat than light, one of the classic theologians of the Scholastic period has stepped into the room and brought us at last some clarity, definition, and order."
Malcolm Guite, author of Faith, Hope and Poetry; life fellow of Girton College, Cambridge
Junius Johnson (PhD, Yale University) is a scholar and writer whose work focuses on historical and philosophical theology. He offers direct teaching over Zoom to adults and younger students through Junius Johnson Academics and is the author of several books, including Patristic and Medieval Atonement Theory and Christ and Analogy: The Christocentric Metaphysics of Hans Urs von Balthasar.