This book offers a critical edition of arguably the greatest work of English theology in the 20th century: Austin Farrer's Bampton Lectures published as The Glass of Vision in 1948. This critical edition also contains an introduction to the significance and context of Farrer's thought, and a selection of thirty-years' worth of commentary by leading British and European theologians and literary scholars: David Brown, Ingolf Dalferth, Hans Haugh, Douglas Hedley, David Jasper and Gerard Loughlin. Of interest to literary and biblical scholars, theologians, and philosophers, this book holds particular value to those exploring the nature of imagination in contemporary thought and scholarship.
This edition is useful as it contains Farrer's original text, plus several essays offering commentary on Farrer's work. Most of it went over my head and I am not familiar with the scholars, but if you pause and consider some of the passages, there's fascinating things going on in here. There are several connections between Farrer's ideas here and some of C. S. Lewis's essays, particularly in God in the Dock: Essays on Theology and Ethics.