Harold Bloom interview on "Jesus and Yahweh" (2005)

Harold Bloom interviewed by Charlie Rose, 2005

Пікірлер: 51

  • @hakmagui9842
    @hakmagui9842Ай бұрын

    I call tell how comfortable these two became with each other.

  • @mothflame99
    @mothflame992 ай бұрын

    If anyone wants to read an explanation of his "gnosticism" i would recommend Agon: Towards a Theory of Revisionism. It's much better than the explanation (or lack thereof) in Omens of Millenium

  • @hakmagui9842

    @hakmagui9842

    Ай бұрын

    True.

  • @danscalia7427
    @danscalia74272 күн бұрын

    Charles Rose literally talks over his guest. What the hell is he doing?

  • @noheroespublishing1907
    @noheroespublishing190724 күн бұрын

    Comrade Bloom is dearly missed.

  • @HugoNewman
    @HugoNewmanАй бұрын

    Charlie Rose, the tragically bad, inexplicably revered interviewer.

  • @96mtbrider
    @96mtbriderАй бұрын

    Bruh got cursed by the demiurge

  • @opinion3742
    @opinion374220 күн бұрын

    Did he call Charlie dear at the end there?

  • @patricktalley4185
    @patricktalley4185Ай бұрын

    The crucifixion was not “suicide”, it was sacrifice.

  • @user-ff4lr2jj5r

    @user-ff4lr2jj5r

    25 күн бұрын

    makes difference....

  • @outlawgt3045

    @outlawgt3045

    16 күн бұрын

    Was not a sacrifice either. Jesus didn't die forever.

  • @patricktalley4185
    @patricktalley4185Ай бұрын

    I loved Harold Bloom (RIP).“Where Might Wisdom Be Found?” is one of my favorite books on biblical literature and how it impacts our lives. Bloom’s conversations on Charlie Rose were always a bit disjointed, however, because the host doesn’t know when to shut up. Rose’s constant interruptions and urgent interjections never allow Bloom to elaborate adequately on the points he’s trying to make. That said, at least Rose knew enough to bring Bloom back again and again, so they could revisit topics and continue their explorations Bloom was a confident - some might say, overconfident - scholar of religious literature. His literary insights on aspects like characterization, theme, and narrative are solid. However, his occasional theological digressions leave a lot to be desired. He was no religious thinker (admittedly). Bloom never seemed to understand or be willing to explore how God can be at once both inscrutable and eminent; how the story of the Bible is a love story between the Creator and His Creation. He sees the crucifixion as suicide, instead of what it is - God willingly sacrificing Himself for man to end the practice of involuntary human sacrifice (scapegoating, ritualistic killing, murder, revenge, war, execution) that had warped our souls. For great literary insight into the writers and characters of the Biblical tradition, I recommend Bloom. But for a true theological understanding of God and Christ beyond those literary parameters, you’ll need to read early spiritual thinkers like Maimonides, Augustine, Aquinas, or some of the more recent religious writers like Chesterton, Merton, or CS Lewis. I’d especially recommend Rene Girard on the connection between the crucifixion and the scapegoating mechanism.

  • @allen5455

    @allen5455

    Ай бұрын

    C.S. Lewis is not profound. Lewis writes from the Darwinist perspective. His "Mere Christianity" confirms this. The whole problem of modernity/postmodernity originates from Darwin. Marx, too, acknowledges Darwin as a necessity.

  • @joycejulep9115

    @joycejulep9115

    29 күн бұрын

    @@allen5455 I respect your opinion, but I have to disagree. I find CS Lewis's "A Grief Observed" immensely profound...and immensely moving. An astoundingly raw, bare depiction of a man who is searching for God in moment of intense grief and confusion. It seems more profound to me every year, as I get older, and as those I love begin to die around me.

  • @allen5455

    @allen5455

    29 күн бұрын

    @@joycejulep9115 In neo-orthodoxy nothing matters but "relationships," thus the necessity for conversations about one's "feelings." Neo-orthodoxy emphasizes the existential over the revelatory. With Lewis, there is no outside-of-self revelation, there is only "virtue signaling."

  • @joycejulep9115

    @joycejulep9115

    29 күн бұрын

    @@allen5455 I'm not any kind of religious expert and don't really understand all those terms. All I know is "A Grief Observed," as well as a few other Lewis books and essays, are profoundly meaningful to me, and I encourage other people to read him

  • @allen5455

    @allen5455

    29 күн бұрын

    @@joycejulep9115 You wrote a five paragraph post, the longest I have observed on the Internet, and you don't understand "those terms"? Maybe you should try for some real understanding. Comprehend beyond "feeling." End of dialogue.

  • @cmk1964
    @cmk1964Ай бұрын

    Which means? Dunno. Just blabbing.

  • @MoorishMonitor
    @MoorishMonitor29 күн бұрын

    Charlie Rose should have stopped interrupting Harry Bloom.

  • @metronistronn
    @metronistronnАй бұрын

    I'm a Pentecostal lol.. Praise God. At one time I picked away at the scripture like Bloom also. Hey Bloom you must come by faith! Wonder if his great brain is helping him now, wherever he is now.

  • @allen5455

    @allen5455

    Ай бұрын

    Bloom was forever learning and never able to come to the knowledge of Truth.

  • @greatcoldemptiness

    @greatcoldemptiness

    8 күн бұрын

    Pentecostalism is demonic

  • @mrb5510

    @mrb5510

    7 күн бұрын

    Utilizing your time on earth by judging dead non-believers in public, and denying the importance of scripture. If Christianity and in turn the bible proves to be true, I have no doubt you'll join him soon enough, wherever he is. You two can chat about it then.

  • @HB-iq6bl
    @HB-iq6bl24 күн бұрын

    josephus the roman historian mentions jesus

  • @ricardocima

    @ricardocima

    12 күн бұрын

    Interpolation

  • @gjeacocke
    @gjeacocke20 күн бұрын

    Harold was lost on his own deluge of words.

  • @ahmetdogan5685

    @ahmetdogan5685

    9 күн бұрын

    😂 🪓

  • @allen5455
    @allen5455Ай бұрын

    So, God is partially lost? Lost to whom? Lost to Harold Bloom.

  • @user-ff4lr2jj5r

    @user-ff4lr2jj5r

    25 күн бұрын

    Can't be loss when you do not exist.

  • @allen5455

    @allen5455

    25 күн бұрын

    @@user-ff4lr2jj5r You don't know that God does not exist. Such is a "presupposition." We invite you to change your thoughts, change your mind. "God in Christ redeeming the world unto Himself."

  • @user-ff4lr2jj5r

    @user-ff4lr2jj5r

    25 күн бұрын

    @@allen5455 I never said I knew for a fact that any god you can name exist or does not exist. But that is the point.

  • @allen5455

    @allen5455

    24 күн бұрын

    @@user-ff4lr2jj5r Logic?

  • @user-ff4lr2jj5r

    @user-ff4lr2jj5r

    24 күн бұрын

    @@allen5455 No thanks. I am already overstocked with logic.

  • @2Uahoj
    @2Uahoj16 күн бұрын

    His religious thoughts here are so confused that Charlie has a hard time following him. Also, hard to understand that Bloom does not recognize that the Jesus of the Gospels does indeed identify himself with God - most notably when Caiaphas questions him in Mark 14:61-62, "are you the son of the Living God?" To which Jesus responds, "I Am" - a term only used for God.

  • @AlbertIsraeli
    @AlbertIsraeliАй бұрын

    People hear, do not follow this man’s example, for he is blind and deaf and blabbering little man. Where is this smart alec now, did he ever came to know the Lord Yeshua the Messiah. People are so brave, when they think, that there is no God. I wonder, if he passed away and never found salvation, then in which “space” is he lost, rather than God. Every knee will bow and every tongue will confess that Yeshua is to the glory of God the Father.

  • @opinion3742

    @opinion3742

    20 күн бұрын

    How is one saved just by believing the story that Jesus was God and sacrificed himself? How does one make that story make sense?

  • @user-ec5vx3uf6r
    @user-ec5vx3uf6rАй бұрын

    Rose never listen, and never read any book and posible never open the complete Works of Shakespeare!