I too like listening to DBH. I particularly like his criticisms of the haughty, the high and mighty, the arrogant, the too convicted of their knowledge of virtue in the churches and in academia. But, when slagging off the haughty etc, he himself sounds quite haughty and arrogant. Hmmm.
What a silly comment. Episcopalianism is high-church Protestantism at best, and Unitarianism-lite in its most banal manifestations; whereas DBH is quite clearly neither. (If my memory hasn't failed me, his brother Addison Hart, however, is an affirming Anglican, FWIW.)
On a more serious note, I could listen to DBH speak for hours.
Loved the section on the value of world religions. Thank you.
Thanks for this discussion. Glad to see Betz and Hart teamed up.
Powerful commentary once again from David Bentley Hart.
Fabulous book, terrific talk.
Would love to sample just the parts of DBH stammering and make a song out of it. That, or a highlight reel would be amusing.
20.10 'The very liaison between knowledge and being' You can cut that out sonny.
I too like listening to DBH.
I particularly like his criticisms of the haughty, the high and mighty, the arrogant, the too convicted of their knowledge of virtue in the churches and in academia.
But, when slagging off the haughty etc, he himself sounds quite haughty and arrogant. Hmmm.
Yes, so true. I love his critiques but not really his solutions.
Finally, a Christian with the guts to call out G.K. Chesterton.
And why is this guy still not an Episcopalian? He thinks and talks like one.
What a silly comment. Episcopalianism is high-church Protestantism at best, and Unitarianism-lite in its most banal manifestations; whereas DBH is quite clearly neither. (If my memory hasn't failed me, his brother Addison Hart, however, is an affirming Anglican, FWIW.)
He grew up Episcopalian and then converted to Eastern Orthodox.
@@SaturnDreamingofMercury His other brother, Robert, is a priest in the Anglican Catholic Church.
@@chanting_germ. Could've fooled me.