Jaroslav Pelikan

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For other persons named Pelikan, see Pelikan (disambiguation).

Jaroslav Jan Pelikan (17 December 192313 May 2006) was one of the world's leading scholars in the history of Christianity and medieval intellectual history.

Pelikan was born in Akron, Ohio to a Slovak father and a Serbian mother. His father was a Lutheran pastor and his paternal grandfather was a bishop of the Slovak Lutheran Church in America.

Legends of Pelikan's precocity are legion. Before he turned 3, his mother had taught him to use the typewriter, as he could not yet hold a pen. His facility with languages (he is thought to have had a command of at least a dozen different tongues) may be traced to his multilingual childhood and early training. That linguistic facility was to serve him well in the career he ultimately chose (after first contemplating becoming a concert pianist) - that of the 20th century's preeminent historian of Christian doctrine, not confining his studies to Roman and Protestant theological history, but embracing also that of the Orthodox East.

He earned his seminary degree and Ph.D. at the University of Chicago in 1946 when he was just 22 and, fortified by this early start, wrote more than 30 books, including his magnum opus, the five volume The Christian Tradition: A History of the Development of Doctrine (1971-1989). Some of his later works attained crossover appeal, reaching beyond the scholarly sphere into the general reading public (notably, Mary Through the Centuries, Jesus Through the Centuries and Whose Bible Is It?).

Pelikan gave the 1992 – 1993 Gifford lectures at the University of Aberdeen, an honor considered comparable to winning the Nobel Prize, published as the book Christianity and Classical Culture. This set of lectures was actually his second as Gifford lecturer; he had given a prior set in the mid-1980s.

He joined Yale University in 1962 as the Titus Street Professor of Ecclesiastical History and in 1972 was named Sterling Professor of History, a position he held until achieving emeritus status in 1996. He served as acting dean and then dean of the Graduate School from 1973-78 and was the William Clyde DeVane Lecturer 1984-86 and again in the fall of 1995. Awards include the Graduate School's 1979 Wilbur Cross Medal and the Medieval Academy of America's 1985 Haskins Medal.

While at Yale, Pelikan won a whimsical contest sponsored by Field & Stream magazine for Ed Zern's column "Exit Laughing." Zern's contest was to translate the motto of the Madison Avenue Rod, Gun, Bloody Mary & Labrador Retriever Benevolent Association ("Keep your powder, your trout flies and your martinis dry") into Latin. Pelikan's winning entry mentioned the martini first, but Pelikan explained that it seemd no less than fitting to have the apertif come first. His winning entry:

    Semper siccandae sunt: potio
    Pulvis, et pelliculatio.  

Pelikan's prodigious energy and abilities led to his appointment to numerous leadership positions in American intellectual life. He was the immediate past president of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. In 1983 the National Endowment for the Humanities selected him to deliver the 12th annual Jefferson Lecture in the Humanities, the highest honor conferred by the federal government for outstanding achievement in the humanities. He has been editor of the religion section of Encyclopedia Britannica, and in 1980 he founded the Council of Scholars at the Library of Congress.

President Bill Clinton appointed Professor Pelikan to serve on the President's Committee on the Arts and Humanities. Dr Pelikan received honorary degrees from 42 universities all over the world. At the age of 80, he was appointed scholarly director for the “Institutions of Democracy Project” at the Annenberg Foundation.

In 2004, having received the John W. Kluge Prize for Lifetime Achievement in the Human Sciences, an honor he shared with the French philosopher Paul Ricoeur, Pelikan donated his award ($500,000) to Saint Vladimir’s Orthodox Theological Seminary, of which he was a trustee.

For most of his life Pelikan belonged to the Lutheran Church, and he was ordained a pastor therein, but in 1998 he and his wife Sylvia were received into the Orthodox Church in America in St Vladimir’s Seminary Chapel. Members of Pelikan’s family remember him saying that he had not as much converted to Orthodoxy as "returned to it, peeling back the layers of my own belief to reveal the Orthodoxy that was always there."[1]

Pelikan died in Hamden, Connecticut at the age of 82 after a battle with lung cancer. He was honored by a memorial service in Yale's Battell Chapel on 10 October 2006 with speeches by distinguished scholars and a musical performance by cellist Yo-Yo Ma. It was reported that, before Pelikan died, he delivered the last in a lifelong series of memorable aphorisms: "If Christ is risen, nothing else matters. And if Christ is not risen -- nothing else matters."

[edit] Bibliography

  • Acts (2006) Brazos Press, ISBN 1-58743-094-0. A theological Bible commentary
  • Bach Among the Theologians (1986), Philadelphia: Fortress Press, ISBN 0-8006-0792-9
  • The Christian Tradition: A History of the Development of Doctrine, 5 vols. (1973–1990). Chicago: University of Chicago Press
  • Christianity and Classical Culture: The Metamorphosis of Natural Theology in the Christian Encounter with Hellenism (1993) Gifford lectures at Aberdeen, Yale U. Press, ISBN 0-300-06255-9
  • Confessor Between East and West: A Portrait of Ukrainian Josyf Cardinal Slipyj
  • Credo: Historical and Theological Guide to Creeds and Confessions of Faith in the Christian Tradition (2003) Yale U. Press, ISBN 0-300-09388-8
  • Development of Christian Doctrine: Some Historical Prolegomena
  • Divine Rhetoric: The Sermon on the Mount As Message and As Model in Augustine, Chrysostom, and Luther (2000) St. Vladimir's Seminary Press, ISBN 0-88141-214-7
  • The Excellent Empire: The Fall of Rome and the Triumph of the Church
  • Faust the Theologian (1995) Yale U. Press, ISBN 0-300-07064-0
  • The Idea of the University: A Reexamination (1992) Yale U. Press, ISBN 0-300-05834-9
  • Interpreting the Bible and the Constitution (2004) Yale U. Press ISBN 0-300-10267-4
  • Jesus Through the Centuries: His Place in the History of Culture (1985) Yale U. Press, ISBN 0-300-07987-7
  • Martin Luther's works (1955–1969) multiple volumes
  • Martin Luther's Basic Theological Writings
  • Mary Through the Centuries: Her Place in the History of Culture (1996) Yale U. Press, ISBN 0-300-07661-4
  • Mary: Images Of The Mother Of Jesus In Jewish And Christian Perspective
  • The Melody of Theology: A Philosophical Dictionary ISBN 0-674-56472-3
  • The Reformation of the Sixteenth Century (Forward) ISBN 0-8070-1301-3
  • The Riddle of Roman Catholicism (1959)
  • Sacred Writings: Buddhism – The Dhammapada (1987) Book of the Month Club, no ISBN
  • Sacred Writings: Hinduism – The Rig Veda (1992) Book of the Month Club, no ISBN
  • Sacred Writings: Islam – The Qur'an (1992) editor, Book of the Month Club, no ISBN, in English with Arabic sub-text
  • The World Treasury of Modern Religious Thought (1990), editor, hardcover: ISBN 0-316-69770-2, paperback: no ISBN issued
  • What Has Athens to Do with Jerusalem?: Timaeus and Genesis in Counterpoint (1998) Thomas Spencer Jerome Lectures, University of Michigan Press, ISBN 0-472-10807-7
  • Whose Bible Is It? A History of the Scriptures Through the Ages (2005) ISBN 0-670-03385-5
  • Continuità e cambiamento nella fede, Di Renzo Editore, Roma, ISBN 88-8323-014-0

[edit] External links

[edit] References

  1. ^ George, Timothy (Summer 2006). "Delighted by doctrine". Christian History & Biography (91): 43-45.