A Revitalization of Images. Gregory C. Higgins

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A Revitalization of Images - Gregory C. Higgins

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” (XXII, 3). The image of God in which humans (“universal humanity”) were created is not gendered. It is incorporeal and the capacities that it imparts to humans apply equally to men and women (XVI, 17).

      Royal imagery pervades Gregory’s description of human nature in the opening chapters of Making. Human nature “by its likeness to the King of all” has “a royal and exalted character.” Rather than donning purple robes, humans are “clothed in virtue, which is in truth the most royal of all raiment, and in place of the sceptre, leaning on the bliss of immortality, and instead of the royal diadem, [they are] decked with the crown of righteousness” (Making, IV, 1). This “dignity of royalty” (IV, 1) accords humans a privileged status in God’s created order. To be sure, humans, like all other living things, take in nutrients and grow and, like other animals, have senses that allow them to be keenly aware of their environment, but according to Gregory humans alone have the gift of reason. Along with reason, humans possess the gift of free will, “for the soul immediately shows its royal and exalted character . . . [in that it is] self-governed, swayed autocratically by its own will” (IV, 1). Rationality and freedom, two hallmarks of the soul’s status as bearing the image of God, play a critical role in Gregory’s theology, but so too does love. “Again, God is love, and the fount of love: for this the great John declares, that ‘love is of God,’ and ‘God is love’: the Fashioner of our nature has made this to be our feature too” (V, 2).

      John Bunyan’s Grace Abounding to the Chief of Sinners

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