4) Could you
talk a little bit about the new Heritage editions?
The
Abbey and University want to share the Saint John's Bible with the world as much
as possible, but for several years the only way to do that was by taking
completed original pages around to various public events. We want the world to
see it, but we don't want the whole world coming to central Minnesota. One
early idea was to have the scribes and artists create twelve identical copies of
the Saint John's Bible and place them around the world, but the cost made that
utterly impractical. Starting in 2004, Liturgical Press was engaged to produce
the half-sized "coffee table" version that almost anyone can buy at bookstores
or online, but the technology to create a full-size, fine-art, accurate and
illuminated reproduction - or, as Donald Jackson prefers to call it, a "faithful
interpretation" - simply did not exist.
That
finally changed in 2007. Mr. Jackson devoted three years to identifying the
best materials and processes to reproduce the Saint John's Bible as accurately
as possible. Digital imaging of each page was performed on-site at the Hill
Museum & Manuscript Library. The original is written on vellum; Donald
found that Monadnock Paper Mills, in New Hampshire, was able to provide a
custom-made 100% cotton archival paper with a life expectancy of many hundreds
of years that looks and acts similar to vellum. The John Roberts Company in
Minnesota invested in a rare Heidelberg XL105 printing press that uses
ultraviolet light to instantly dry the layers of fade-resistant ink that are
applied in multiple passes. That is a critical requirement, because wet ink
applied to cotton tends to bleed broadly and rapidly along the fibers. Printed
pages are then delivered to McIntosh Embossing, also in Minnesota, where all of
the silver and gold is applied to every illuminated element that appears in the
original. This may require a half-dozen passes or more for each page to
recreate the proper appearance and feel of illuminated elements, and may take
days. Each page is then inspected and touched up by hand by members of the
original team to ensure the best possible reproduction. The completed pages are
sent to Roswell Bookbinding in Arizona where they are sewn by hand into
handcrafted Italian leather covers with wood cores. Each volume has a unique
design including embossed highlights using 24K gold. Only 299 sets of the
Heritage Edition will be produced. The first five volumes are done, Gospels
& Acts and Letters & Revelation are in the works.
One of
my favorite reproduction tricks for the Heritage Edition is the illusion of
translucency. The original vellum is thin enough that you can faintly see what
is on the other side of the page you are reading. Indeed, some illuminations
intentionally rely on this feature. The cotton pages, however, are quite
opaque. In order to recreate the appearance of the original, every page not
only has it's own content clearly printed on it, but also a very faint image of
the opposite page. The effect is so natural and convincing that no one notices
it unless I point it out, and then they are quite delighted by the attention to
detail in the reproduction. This was not done for the "coffee table"
edition.
The
result is breathtaking. I've had the honor of caring for a Heritage Edition
volume of Historical Books in my home for a few weeks, and I am still awed by
its appearance every day. It is a huge book, more than two feet tall and three
feet wide when open. It weighs more than my pre-schooler. The pages are heavy
with a distinct texture. Reading the large script is an intentional act, not
because it is too small or too ornate, but because it's appearance intimately
draws the reader into the text on the page. I could write volumes about the
illuminations alone, which are vibrant and often contain so many elements that a
person could ponder them together with the related text for days.
Every
time I witness someone first touch a page and try to turn from one to the next,
they express a sense of reverence and great care, as if they can't believe they
are allowed to touch it (we always encourage people to explore illuminations and
read from their favorite passages - with clean hands, of course). Discussions
start and continue afterward as people share with each other what they saw.
Finally, I always ask people to find their favorite passage within the volume I
am presenting; this is a dramatic, awe-inspiring representation of God's Word,
but ultimately it is an individual's relationship with the Bible that is most
important. The act of locating and reading a favorite passage makes viewing the
Saint John's Bible a personal experience. In my humble opinion, the Heritage
Edition of the Saint John's Bible undoubtedly accomplishes the goal of igniting
the spiritual imagination of everyone who sees it.
5)
Which of illuminations in the Saint John's Bible do you like the most, and
why?
This
one is probably the hardest question because I like so many of the illuminations
for different reasons. I'll mention eight of them, and try to keep each one
brief because I would rather let other people find their own
interpretations.
The
first one I would like to mention is actually a theme that runs through all
seven volumes. God is perfect, humans aren't. Occasionally, a scribe would
accidentally miss a line of text. If the error was caught immediately, the
scribe could scrape away the mistake, re-finish that part of the vellum, and
continue. If the mistake was not caught until the page was complete, the
solution was to draw a small marginalia like a bird holding a string that would
point to the location of the mistake and lead the reader to the bottom of the
page where the missing line would be inserted in a ribbon-like banner. Look at
Mark 3:20 for an example.
From
Pentateuch, I like the illumination of Jacob's Ladder in Genesis 28. The print
edition does not do it justice, because it is hard to notice certain details
that convey the scale of the event being depicted. Can you find Jacob? The
first time that I saw this in the Heritage Edition and had my perspective
properly reset I was stunned. I also must mention the illuminations for
Creation and for the descendants of Abraham and Sarah.
Hands
down, my absolute favorite piece of art in Historical Books is a small flourish
of color in the margin near 2 Kings 20-21. Yes, there are bigger, grander
images elsewhere (this volume ties Gospels & Acts for most illuminations),
but this small flourish is, to me, the single most human element of the entire
project. Brother Dietrich Reinhart, a monk of the Abbey, president of the
University, and a leading champion of the project, passed away while this page
was being created. The artist, Suzanne Moore, hid a small D and R in the
flourish to honor him.
Wisdom
Books has several illuminations that span both pages, marking it as perhaps the
most frequently dramatic volume of the seven. These books of the Bible are, for
me, quite a relief from the violence found in much of the Historical Books. My
favorite, though, is a small quarter-page illumination at the beginning of
Proverbs. As I mentioned earlier, the original vellum pages are translucent.
The intro to Proverbs sits over the ending illumination in Job, and the two
effectively create a single illumination. In a typical Bible, Psalms appear
between Job and Proverbs. Psalms have their own volume, and so the artist of
these two illuminations took the opportunity to subtly remind readers that the
characters in Job likely knew all the Proverbs and yet they still did not know
all of God's ways.
There
are only a few illuminations in the Psalms volume and all of them are
effectively subsets of the first illumination at the start of the book. I have
a personal affinity for Psalm 1, so I really enjoy that frontispiece. This
volume also pays respect to other faith traditions in a very subtle way.
Throughout Psalms you will see golden oscilloscope representations of singing.
Horizontal wave forms were captured from Benedictine monks chanting, while the
vertical ones are from several non-Christian faiths.
The
"Suffering Servant" illumination in Prophets, located near Isaiah 52 and 53, is
not something that would jump out for most people as a favorite. I struggle
with it a lot. It is grim. The small scrawny person looks gaunt and lost. The
black gate around the figure is meant to look like a particular passageway that
captured Africans went through as they boarded slave ships bound for the New
World. The hint of chain-link fences all around suggest separation and
oppression. This is suffering, both ancient and modern. This illumination is
powerful and horrible at the same time.
The
volume for Gospels & Acts is packed with amazing artwork. The whole book is
a masterpiece, and yet some people claim it is the weakest of the seven volumes,
in part because it was the first completed and thus many lessons were learned
while making it but not implemented within it. If pressed for just one
illumination as a favorite, I would have to say the frontispiece to the Gospel
of John. It is the very first one I saw nearly a decade ago, and I have always
been fascinated with it. I always thought it was an intimidating image of
Christ, almost scary as if it were stomping into the scene, looking down with an
angry - almost alien - scowl. It wasn't until a recent trip to the Abbey when I
saw a full-size framed print that my perspective completely changed. I see two
distinctly different characters in the illuminated figure of Christ, and that
has doubled my sense of wonder with this piece.
In
contrast, Letters & Revelation was the last volume completed, and thus
represents a dozen years of hard-earned skill and technique by people who were
already masters in their arts at the start of the project. If Gospels &
Acts leaves you stunned, Letters & Revelation delivers the knock-out punch.
The illumination for 1 Corinthians 13 is my absolute favorite in the whole
volume in part because it is the only one out of all seven volumes that
reproduces the complete content of the related chapter within the illumination.
It also just happens to be my favorite chapter.
6)
In general, if someone is thinking about purchasing some items from the Saint
John's Bible catalogue, where would you recommend they start?
If you are in the central Minnesota area, or
willing to make the trip, my first recommendation would be to visit the Hill
Museum & Manuscript Library ( www.hmml.org ) on the campus of Saint John's Abbey and
University. Not only can you find books and prints for sale there, but you can
walk through a public display of original pages from the Saint John's Bible.
The Heritage Edition is a joy to behold, but the original remains in a class all
it's own, and I think it's worth the trip to see original pages. HMML is home
to the world's largest collection of images of manuscripts, a substantial number
of original ancient manuscripts, and an enviable art collection. The home of
Liturgical Press ( www.litpress.org ) is also there on campus, and they offer
study guides and educational materials using illuminations from the SJB, as well
as hundreds of other titles, mostly related to Catholicism. No visit of Saint
John's would be complete without also touring the iconic Abbey Church, the Great
Hall, and a walk along Lake Sagatagan out to the Stella Maris Chapel. Don't
forget to pick up a couple loaves of the world-famous Saint John's Bread before
you leave. For everyone else, the Saint John's Bible website is at www.saintjohnsbible.org and offers views of all 1150 pages
online, a history of how and why it was made, details about the Heritage
Program, an online store where you can buy books and prints and gifts, news
about current and upcoming public events, and a section about programming
options including use in worship, book loans, exhibitions, and even an
educator's toolkit with curriculum and resources. The website also has contact
information if you or an organization you represent is interested in purchasing
a set of the Heritage Edition.
7)
Finally, do you have a favorite passage or verse from the Bible? Which
translation do you prefer?
I've
spent enough time studying English translations and their guiding philosophies,
as well as debates, to know that discussing translation preference can be quite
the minefield. Frankly, I'm unhappy with the way translation arguments divide
Christians from each other. My favorite answer is the popular avoidance: "The
best translation is the one that brings -you- closer to God." As for me, if I'm
not reading from the Saint John's Bible (which uses the Catholic Edition of the
NRSV), I genuinely enjoy reading the NRSV with Apocrypha, and choose it first
(either a pocket book that is almost always with me, or a chunky Oxford study
Bible). The academic in me loves comparing translations, because I have
occasionally found radically different interpretations of the same text. To
that end, I almost always have an NRSV, RSV, KJV, NIV, and NET on hand and open
to the same passages, along with a couple different online commentaries. If I
had the time to learn Koine Greek, I would be reading that.
I have
three favorite passages. The first is from 2 Samuel 14:14 "But God will not
take away a life; he will devise plans so as not to keep an outcast banished
forever from his presence." I realize I'm taking the verse out of context, but
as a standalone statement I know God did this for me. I can see many steps he
took over the last couple years to bring me back to him, and I am grateful for
each one.
The
second is from the parable of the lost sheep in Matthew 18:12-13 "What do you
think? If a shepherd has a hundred sheep, and one of them has gone astray, does
he not leave the ninety-nine on the mountains and go in search of the one that
went astray? And if he finds it, truly I tell you, he rejoices over it more than
over the ninety-nine that never went astray." Again, I know God came to me when
I was lost and too afraid to take the step towards him first. And let me tell
ya, when God rejoices, he does it in a big way. Wow.
The third is the entire thirteenth chapter of
First Corinthians. It's the first complete (albeit brief) chapter I've
committed to memory. Yes, it's the popular wedding passage. If you've paid
attention to the whole letter, you know that chapter is really referring to
interactions within a church community, but it's so broadly applicable to every
kind of relationship between any number of people. The Peace Studies major in
me appreciates that.
1 comment:
When is it slated to be completed, and where can I get a full set? (I understand, from your post, they are identical to the actual, original St John's Bible in dimensions, and as many other ways as possible.)
How much is it likely to cost? $5,000? Price is not an object (i.e., I have good credit).
I've always dreamed of owning an actual Gutenberg (I could read it, too, as I can read Latin and mostly read blackface), and this would be one step closer.
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