Robert D. Richardson Quote

The truth was that Emerson did not often refer to Scripture (after he announced the text, which was invariably from the Bible) because the Bible was no longer for him an object of study; it was an example for him for emulation. He was interested in his own primary, personal religious experience and that of his parishioners, not in repeating and deferring to the reported religious experiences of long departed historical personages. When he studied, say, the Book of Proverbs, he no longer thought of himself as a commentator, but as the potential author of a similar book.


p. 90 - Emerson: The Mind on Fire (1995)


The truth was that Emerson did not often refer to Scripture (after he announced the text, which was invariably from the Bible) because the Bible was...

The truth was that Emerson did not often refer to Scripture (after he announced the text, which was invariably from the Bible) because the Bible was...

The truth was that Emerson did not often refer to Scripture (after he announced the text, which was invariably from the Bible) because the Bible was...

The truth was that Emerson did not often refer to Scripture (after he announced the text, which was invariably from the Bible) because the Bible was...