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Why Should Christians Read The Pagan Classics? Reason 10: LITERATURE
Memoria Press ^ | July 2014 | Cheryl Lowe

Posted on 05/21/2020 2:10:53 PM PDT by CondoleezzaProtege

Reason #10: LITERATURE

What is literature, and what is it for anyway? Have you ever wondered that? It’s not practical like science and math, so what is its purpose? Why do we include literature in our curriculum, how do we choose it, and what do we hope to achieve by reading literature? These are some of the questions that puzzled me most in my own education.

The ancients thought about all of these questions too. Plato brings up the question of poetry, by which the ancients meant literature, and he famously bans the poets from his ideal Republic. Because, he said, the poets inflame the emotions at the expense of the intellect. And, furthermore, the gods did all kinds of scandalous things and weren’t very good role models. So Plato was the first “book banner,” which I wish parents would use as a defense when objecting to The Catcher in the Rye or some other clearly inappropriate book their impressionable child is being forced to read in school.

Yes, the ancients were concerned about the effects of literature on children. Quintilian recommended a grading of literature according to age, and Plutarch devoted a whole treatise to the sort of guidance needed for the young when reading Homer and the other poets. Wouldn’t we parents like to have Plato, Quintilian, and Plutarch on our sides when advocating for our children? We could—if we had had a classical education.

But was Plato right to ban the poets? He raised the question of the purpose and value of literature and there have been many to answer his objections, beginning of course with Aristotle, who, in his Poetics, defends and explains the nature and purpose of literature. Literature, Aristotle says, holds up a mirror to man, so that he can see himself more clearly, see beyond the surface to the meaning of life. For the Greeks, the unexamined life, the life of a slave, was not worth living.

The point I’m trying to make here is that there isn’t much the Greeks didn’t think about, and you will find what they had to say is as relevant today as it was 2,500 years ago. And if you are concerned about the effects of literature on the young, so were they.

For many Christians, a serious objection to classical literature is one echoed by Plato: the necessity of learning about the pagan gods. Let me make two quick points about Greek and Roman mythology:

1. Chesterton explained in The Everlasting Man that there were two kinds of pagans in the ancient world: the good pagans (the Greeks and Romans) who had beautiful, benevolent gods that did not require human sacrifice or temple prostitution, and the bad pagans of Baal, Tyre, Carthage, and Canaan, described so vividly in the Old Testament. The battle between these two religions culminated in the Punic Wars, in which Rome destroyed Carthage and the religion of Baal once and for all. The Romans, then, actually accomplished what the Hebrews were unable to do in the Old Testament. God works in mysterious ways.

2. The gods are really archetypes for human character traits and as such provide stories that have proven to be classic and eternal. They describe the human condition so well that we have no real substitute for them. Knowledge of Greek mythology is necessary for a study of English literature and Western art, because writers and artists can’t seem to do without it, and neither can we. Even today, if we want a symbol for beauty, what do we use? Venus.

Like everything else in my “Ten Reasons to Study the Pagans,” literature begins with the Greeks and so must we. Without the foundation of the pagan classics, our study of literature will always be superficial and incomplete.


TOPICS: Books/Literature; History
KEYWORDS: cheryllowe; christianity; faithandphilosophy; memoriapress; paganclassics; pages; philosophy; religion

1 posted on 05/21/2020 2:10:53 PM PDT by CondoleezzaProtege
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To: CondoleezzaProtege

Top 10 Reasons Why Christians Should Read the Pagan Classics

Intro/Reason 1: Architecture
https://www.memoriapress.com/articles/why-christians-should-read-pagan-classics-reason-1/

Reason 2: Virtue
https://www.memoriapress.com/articles/why-should-christians-read-pagan-classics-reason-2/

Reason 3: Science
https://www.memoriapress.com/articles/why-should-christians-read-pagan-classics-reason-3/

Reason 4: Education
https://www.memoriapress.com/articles/why-should-christians-read-pagan-classics-reason-4/

Reason 5: Natural Law
https://www.memoriapress.com/articles/why-should-christians-read-pagan-classics-reason-5/

Reason 6: Government
https://www.memoriapress.com/articles/why-should-christians-read-pagan-classics-reason-6/

Reason 7: Religion
https://www.memoriapress.com/articles/why-should-christians-read-pagan-classics-reason-7/

Reason 8: Philosophy
https://www.memoriapress.com/articles/why-should-christians-read-pagan-classics-reason-8/

Reason 9: The Human Condition
https://www.memoriapress.com/articles/why-should-christians-read-pagan-classics-reason-9/

Reason 10: Literature
https://www.memoriapress.com/articles/why-should-christians-read-pagan-classics-reason-10/


2 posted on 05/21/2020 2:12:10 PM PDT by CondoleezzaProtege
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To: CondoleezzaProtege
CHERYL LOWE

Cheryl Lowe was the author of the popular Latin programs, Latina Christiana, Lingua Angelica, and the Forms Series. She and her husband, Jim, were married for forty years and have two sons, both of whom were National Merit Finalists. Cheryl discovered Latin when she homeschooled her sons and was a self-styled apostle of Latin, claiming that Latin has more educational value than any other subject you can teach your children. Cheryl graduated from the University of Louisville with a degree in chemistry and from Western KY University with an M.S in Biology. Cheryl had wide teaching experience, in both content and venue, teaching everything from phonics, reading, math, Bible, and chemistry to Shakespeare and Latin, and teaching in public and private schools, as well as homeschooling. Cheryl and her son Brian founded Memoria Press in 1998 and in 2000, the highly successful Highlands Latin School where all of the Memoria Press products are taught and field tested.

3 posted on 05/21/2020 2:15:42 PM PDT by CondoleezzaProtege
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To: CondoleezzaProtege

Bump.


4 posted on 05/21/2020 2:17:24 PM PDT by Sans-Culotte (With every passing day, I am a little bit gladder that Romney lost in 2012.)
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To: Daffy; livius; conservatism_IS_compassion; ptsal
Final article of the series :)!


5 posted on 05/21/2020 2:19:57 PM PDT by CondoleezzaProtege
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To: CondoleezzaProtege

One of the most important things that result from studying the classics is that it causes you, obliges you, to step outside your own time and culture. You are shaped by your own time and culture, which makes it difficult to judge it, something like using the ship you are on for a compass. You have no way of seeing that its going off course.

The writers of the classics were not superhuman by no means, they were also limited by their time and place. But by engaging with them, we step outside our own. And we engage in discussions more basic than whatever are the shallow talking points of the day as broadcast on all sides of us at full blast.


6 posted on 05/21/2020 2:53:45 PM PDT by marron
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To: CondoleezzaProtege
So... Is it safe to assume that, whenever this endless venture into paganism ends, you'll be introducing a 10-to-15-part series on why we should read the Koran?

Not a "criticism"... Just curious...

7 posted on 05/21/2020 3:04:51 PM PDT by SuperLuminal (Where is Sam Adams now that we desperately need him)
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To: SuperLuminal

Are you so daft? You do realize your on a website called “Free REPUBLIC” don’t you?

WHere do you think the concept of a REPUBLIC came from?

Not Islam, but ANcient Rome!


8 posted on 05/21/2020 3:15:45 PM PDT by CondoleezzaProtege
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To: CondoleezzaProtege
Hmmm... OK...
I'll take that to be a "NO"...
Glad to hear it...

Although you are chasing the history of the Republic:
"WHere do you think the concept of a REPUBLIC came from?",
you might also address readings that can clarify:
"WHere do you think the concept of a REPUBLIC went to?"

9 posted on 05/21/2020 3:55:11 PM PDT by SuperLuminal (Where is Sam Adams now that we desperately need him)
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To: CondoleezzaProtege
Chesterton explained in The Everlasting Man that there were two kinds of pagans in the ancient world: the good pagans (the Greeks and Romans) who had beautiful, benevolent gods that did not require human sacrifice or temple prostitution, and the bad pagans of Baal, Tyre, Carthage, and Canaan, described so vividly in the Old Testament.

I hate to have to disagree with Chesterton but the Greek gods did indeed require human sacrifice and temple prostitution. The Roman gods were just Greek gods with some new names.

And as for benevolent? Well, if you consider rape, murder, torture, incest, bestiality and cannibalism to be benevolent then heaven defend me from what you consider malevolent.

10 posted on 05/21/2020 4:09:48 PM PDT by Harmless Teddy Bear (Leave it to me to be holdin' the matches when the fire truck shows up & there's nobody else to blame)
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To: metmom

Ping.


11 posted on 05/22/2020 6:23:01 AM PDT by conservatism_IS_compassion (Socialism is cynicism directed towards society and - correspondingly - naivete towards government.)
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