|
GraciousCall.org - Calvin: Commentaries - GENERAL EDITORS' PREFACE
Title Contents >>
GENERAL EDITORS' PREFACE
The Christian Church possesses in its literature an abundant and incomparable
treasure. But it is an inheritance that must be reclaimed by each generation.
THE LIBRARY OF CHRISTIAN CLASSICS is designed to present in the English
language, and in twenty-six volumes of convenient size, a selection of the most
indispensable Christian treatises written prior to the end of the sixteenth
century.
The practice of giving circulation to writings selected for superior worth or
special interest was adopted at the beginning of Christian history. The
canonical Scriptures were themselves a selection from a much wider literature.
In the Patristic era there began to appear a class of works of compilation
(often designed for ready reference in controversy) of the opinions of
well-reputed predecessors, and in the Middle Ages many such works were
produced. These medieval anthologies actually preserve some noteworthy
materials from works otherwise lost.
In modern times, with the increasing inability even of those trained in
universities and theological colleges to read Latin and Greek texts with ease
and familiarity, the translation of selected portions of earlier Christian
literature into modern languages has become more necessary than ever; while the
wide range of distinguished books written in vernaculars such as English makes
selection there also needful. The efforts that have been made to meet this need
are too numerous to be noted here, but none of these collections serves the
purpose of the reader who desires a library of representative treatises
spanning the Christian centuries as a whole. Most of them embrace only the age
of the Church Fathers, and some of them have long been out of print. A fresh
translation of a work already translated may shed much new light upon its
meaning. This is true even of Bible translations despite the work
of many experts through the centuries. In some instances old translations have
been adopted in this series, but wherever necessary or desirable, new ones have
been made. Notes have been supplied where these were needed to explain the
author's meaning. The introductions provided for the several treatises and
extracts will, we believes furnish welcome guidance. JOHN BAILLIE JOHN T. MCNEILL HENRY P. VAN DUSEN
<< Title Contents >>
|