The Saint John's Bible President's Lecture
Daniele C. Struppa, Ph. D. - President, Chapman University
Lecture - Science and Religion: The Two Kingdoms
Reception to follow
About The Saint John's Bible
At the dawn of the twenty-first century, Saint John’s Abbey and University in Collegeville, Minnesota commissioned a work of art that illuminates the Word of God for a new millennium and designed to ignite the spiritual imagination of believers throughout the world.
The Saint John’s Bible is the first handwritten, monumental, illuminated Bible commissioned by a Benedictine monastery in the modern era. It was created by scribes in a Scriptorium in Wales under the artistic direction of Donald Jackson, one of the world’s foremost calligraphers and the Senior Scribe to Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth’s Crown Office at the House of Lords. The Bible was completed in 2011, and its permanent home is the Hill Museum & Manuscript Library at Saint John’s Abbey and University in Collegeville, Minnesota.
The Saint John’s Bible incorporates many of the characteristics of its medieval predecessors: it was written on vellum, using quills, natural handmade inks, hand ground pigments and gild such as gold leaf, silver leaf and platinum. And yet, it employs a modern English translation (NRSV) as well as contemporary scripts and illumination.
The Saint John’s Bible reaffirms Saint John’s commitment to Scripture and to the book arts. The Saint John’s Bible is a prophetic witness to the Word of God in our day and beautiful and dignified expression of the Benedictine vision: “That in all things God may be glorified.”
You can contact the event organizer, Nancy Brink at brink@chapman.edu or (714) 628-7246.
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