Christians Reading Classics
audiobook (Unabridged) ∣ Audio Lectures: An Introduction to Greco-Roman Classics from Homer to Boethius
By Nadya Williams

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Can Christians today engage with the great classics of Greco-Roman pagan literature for spiritual formation and growth in the virtues?
Classical scholar Nadya Williams responds with an unequivocal "Yes!" Even in the Late Roman Empire Christians like Augustine and Boethius did just this. But engaging with the classics this way requires reading differently than, perhaps, most people today are used to doing.
Christians Reading Classics Video Lectures is a video series about reading the Greco-Roman classics as Christians—the why, the how, and to a lesser extent, the when. Just as our bodies are what we eat, so are our minds what we consume. There is value in engaging with literature to nourish our minds and souls—not just the Bible but all that we read for spiritual formation.
Almost two thousand years ago, as Christianity was first beginning to spread in the Ancient Mediterranean world, the gospel came to believers who had grown up hearing and reading the great works of pagan literature and seeing the pagan gods everywhere around in their world. The joy in encountering Jesus stood out particularly starkly against the pagan worldview that comes through so clearly in the myths. And yet, they could also see hints of truth in those myths.
In twenty short videos, Nadya Williams introduces us to different ancient authors and their key works. She offers three interrelated reasons for Christians today to read the pagan classics for spiritual formation: reading to be surprised by joy, to understand the world of the Bible and the earliest Christians, and for character formation. It is time Christians rediscovered the benefits of reading the great works of Greco-Roman classical literature as Christians.