‘Teach Us the Secret Runes’. The Lord’s Prayer in Heliand

The ninth century Heliand is a poetic retelling of the New Testament in Old Saxon, written by an anonymous monk for the purpose of confirming the conversion his fellow Saxons to the new faith. This conversion had been forced upon them by the Frankish invaders. The author adepts the story of Jesus Ch...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Bosman Frank G.
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Sciendo 2016-10-01
Series:Perichoresis: The Theological Journal of Emanuel University
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1515/perc-2016-0009
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spelling doaj-51655bcad35f414d8baefd8b3e3ce60b2021-09-05T13:59:31ZengSciendoPerichoresis: The Theological Journal of Emanuel University2284-73082016-10-01142395110.1515/perc-2016-0009perc-2016-0009‘Teach Us the Secret Runes’. The Lord’s Prayer in HeliandBosman Frank G.0Cultural theologian and scientific researcher at the Cobbenhagen Center within Tilburg University’s School of Humanities, NetherlandsThe ninth century Heliand is a poetic retelling of the New Testament in Old Saxon, written by an anonymous monk for the purpose of confirming the conversion his fellow Saxons to the new faith. This conversion had been forced upon them by the Frankish invaders. The author adepts the story of Jesus Christ to fit within the feudal Saxon society and precursory Nordic mythology. This contribution focuses on the Saxon rendering of the Lord’s Prayer as it is situated in the context of the Sermon on the Mount. Several key differences between the Saxon version and its biblical original are pointed out. These mirror and illustrate the attempt of the anonymous author to inculturate Jesus’ message. Finally, it is shown how, by some subtle phrases in the text of the Heliand, the poet of the Heliand is including his Saxon audience to fit themselves spiritually into the biblical story. Through the Heliand, Jesus seems to speak directly to its readers, thus stimulating a transformation of the reader-or hearer-himself.https://doi.org/10.1515/perc-2016-0009heliandinculturationcultural theologyold saxon (language)the lord’s prayer
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Bosman Frank G.
spellingShingle Bosman Frank G.
‘Teach Us the Secret Runes’. The Lord’s Prayer in Heliand
Perichoresis: The Theological Journal of Emanuel University
heliand
inculturation
cultural theology
old saxon (language)
the lord’s prayer
author_facet Bosman Frank G.
author_sort Bosman Frank G.
title ‘Teach Us the Secret Runes’. The Lord’s Prayer in Heliand
title_short ‘Teach Us the Secret Runes’. The Lord’s Prayer in Heliand
title_full ‘Teach Us the Secret Runes’. The Lord’s Prayer in Heliand
title_fullStr ‘Teach Us the Secret Runes’. The Lord’s Prayer in Heliand
title_full_unstemmed ‘Teach Us the Secret Runes’. The Lord’s Prayer in Heliand
title_sort ‘teach us the secret runes’. the lord’s prayer in heliand
publisher Sciendo
series Perichoresis: The Theological Journal of Emanuel University
issn 2284-7308
publishDate 2016-10-01
description The ninth century Heliand is a poetic retelling of the New Testament in Old Saxon, written by an anonymous monk for the purpose of confirming the conversion his fellow Saxons to the new faith. This conversion had been forced upon them by the Frankish invaders. The author adepts the story of Jesus Christ to fit within the feudal Saxon society and precursory Nordic mythology. This contribution focuses on the Saxon rendering of the Lord’s Prayer as it is situated in the context of the Sermon on the Mount. Several key differences between the Saxon version and its biblical original are pointed out. These mirror and illustrate the attempt of the anonymous author to inculturate Jesus’ message. Finally, it is shown how, by some subtle phrases in the text of the Heliand, the poet of the Heliand is including his Saxon audience to fit themselves spiritually into the biblical story. Through the Heliand, Jesus seems to speak directly to its readers, thus stimulating a transformation of the reader-or hearer-himself.
topic heliand
inculturation
cultural theology
old saxon (language)
the lord’s prayer
url https://doi.org/10.1515/perc-2016-0009
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