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Love Your Enemies

Biblical contradictions on friendship. Dr Thomas Dixon's history of the meaning of friendship over the centuries. From March 2014.

Social networking appears to be expanding our circles of friendship just as our sense of community is contracting: Dr Thomas Dixon presents a timely history of how the meaning and experience of friendship have changed over the centuries.

At a time when Christianity taught a gospel of universal love, including loving your enemy, individuals might still find themselves drawn to particular friendships. The Bible itself contained such contradictions, as the 17th century Anglican poet George Herbert put it: "David had his Jonathan, Christ his John." These apparent contradictions were the cause of real anxiety amongst devout Christians.

The role of individual friendships became even more apparent after the Reformation, when personal friendships began to assume the confessional role once held by priests.

Thomas Dixon takes up the story during the Civil War, and considers this tension within particular religious communities such as the Quakers.

He talks with the historian Naomi Tadmor and also hears from Anglican-turned-Quaker, Terry Waite, who movingly recalls the meaning of friendship and of learning to love himself as a friend, during years of solitary confinement after being taken hostage in 1987.

Producer: Beaty Rubens

First broadcast on 麻豆社 Radio 4 in March 2014.

Available now

15 minutes

Last on

Thu 26 Sep 2019 02:15

Further Reading

Laura Gowing, Michael Hunter and Miri Rubin (eds), Love, Friendship and Faith in Europe, 1300-1800 (Palgrave, 2005)

Amanda E. Herbert, Female Alliances: Gender, Identity, and Friendship in Early Modern Britain (Yale University Press, 2014)

Terry Waite, Taken on Trust (Coronet, 1994)

Broadcasts

  • Wed 26 Mar 2014 13:45
  • Wed 30 Mar 2016 14:15
  • Thu 31 Mar 2016 02:15
  • Wed 27 Dec 2017 14:15
  • Thu 28 Dec 2017 02:15
  • Wed 25 Sep 2019 14:15
  • Thu 26 Sep 2019 02:15