The Devil's Tabernacle is the first book
to examine in depth the intellectual and cultural impact
of the oracles of pagan antiquity on modern European
thought. Anthony Ossa-Richardson shows how the study of
the oracles influenced, and was influenced by, some of
the most significant developments in early modernity,
such as the Christian humanist recovery of ancient
religion, confessional polemics, Deist and libertine
challenges to religion, antiquarianism and early
archaeology, Romantic historiography, and spiritualism.
Ossa-Richardson examines the different views of the
oracles since the Renaissance--that they were the work
of the devil, or natural causes, or the fraud of
priests, or finally an organic element of ancient Greek
society. The range of discussion on the subject, as he
demonstrates, is considerably more complex than has been
realized before: hundreds of scholars, theologians, and
critics commented on the oracles, drawing on a huge
variety of intellectual contexts to frame their
beliefs. In a central chapter, Ossa-Richardson
interrogates the landmark dispute on the oracles between
Bernard de Fontenelle and Jean-François Baltus,
challenging Whiggish assumptions about the mechanics of
debate on the cusp of the Enlightenment. With erudition
and an eye for detail, he argues that, on both sides of
the controversy, to speak of the ancient oracles in
early modernity was to speak of one's own historical
identity as a Christian.
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