Cur Deus Homo? (Why God Became Man)
Anselm of Canterbury and Anselm Of Canterbury
Read by LibriVox Volunteers
Begun in England “in great tribulation of heart,” finished in the serene atmosphere and restful solitude of Schiavi, it is unquestionably, from a literary point of view, Anselm’s masterpiece, and even at the present day can be read with pleasure by those least versed in the mysteries of Catholic theology.
Cur Deus Homo? such is its title; but its scope is not, as might be inferred, the determination of the final cause of the Incarnation. Anselm seeks in this treatise to vindicate its propriety if such an expression be allowable, as the economy of redemption. Was the Incarnation derogatory to the majesty of God? What was the nature of the obstacle which the Fall opposed to the Divine forgiveness? Could not that obstacle have been removed in some other way than by the Incarnation? How, as a matter of fact, was it removed by the life, suffering, death, and resurrection of the Incarnate God? Such are the questions with which Anselm deals, working the subject out dialectically in the shape of a dialogue between himself and his friend Boso, the latter playing the part of Advocatus Diaboli against the entire providential scheme. - Summary by James Macmullen Rigg (1855-1926) (3 hr 5 min)
Chapters
Preface | 2:16 | Read by InTheDesert |
Book 1 Chapters 1-5 | 11:10 | Read by Larry Wilson |
Book 1 Chapters 6-10 | 28:09 | Read by Larry Wilson |
Book 1 Chapters 11-15 | 13:26 | Read by Larry Wilson |
Book 1 Chapters 16-20 | 28:30 | Read by Larry Wilson |
Book 1 Chapters 21-25 | 18:16 | Read by Larry Wilson |
Book 2 Chapters 1-5 | 7:57 | Read by Larry Wilson |
Book 2 Chapters 6-10 | 18:28 | Read by Larry Wilson |
Book 2 Chapters 11-15 | 15:43 | Read by Larry Wilson |
Book 2 Chapters 16-18 (Part 1) | 25:36 | Read by Larry Wilson |
Book 2 Chapters 18 (Part 2)-22 | 15:50 | Read by Larry Wilson |
Reviews
Excellent!
A LibriVox Listener
Thank you for a wonderful reading of a foundational text from one of the great mediaeval realist.
nicely read and presented
A LibriVox Listener
presented as a dialgue , with spoken punctuation and phrasing
Awesome book, excellent reading.
Dominik
Praise God!