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We've walked to the second circle of hell, where the winds of lust howl. But not yet. First, we must meet a connoisseur of sin: Minos. He determines your circle of hell. Not Jesus. Not Satan. But a figure from classical mythology.
Join me, Mark Scarbrough, as we push farther into hell but also further into irony, opacity, and puzzlement. Or to put it another way, is Virgil a sure guide for our pilgrim, Dante?
Consider supporting this work with a donation at this PayPal link right here.
Here are the segments of this episode of WALKING WITH DANTE:
[01:24] My English translation of INFERNO, Canto V, Lines 1 - 24. If you'd like to read along, find a study guide for a deeper understanding of the passage, or even start a conversation with me by dropping a comment to this episode, look for this passage on my website: markscarbrough.com.
[03:17] The descent from the first circle to the second--and thoughts on the increasingly clear geography of hell.
[04:18] Minos, a figure out mythology and into Virgil's AENEID.
[08:02] Minos is a sure judge but he's not a traditional demon from Christian tradition. He's our second mythic figure in INFERNO.
[11:56] Questions about determinism--but more importantly, answers about grace (or at least confession).
[16:49] The judgment itself, as Minos wraps his tail around himself--except this brings up further questions of Limbo and we're reminded again of its strangeness.
[21:18] Hell has a traveler's hostel in its geography! And lots about Virgil: Minos' warning, Virgil's spell that works again, and the strangeness of Virgil himself, the embodiment of the ambivalence of Limbo, leading the pilgrim across the universe.
By Mark Scarbrough4.8
161161 ratings
We've walked to the second circle of hell, where the winds of lust howl. But not yet. First, we must meet a connoisseur of sin: Minos. He determines your circle of hell. Not Jesus. Not Satan. But a figure from classical mythology.
Join me, Mark Scarbrough, as we push farther into hell but also further into irony, opacity, and puzzlement. Or to put it another way, is Virgil a sure guide for our pilgrim, Dante?
Consider supporting this work with a donation at this PayPal link right here.
Here are the segments of this episode of WALKING WITH DANTE:
[01:24] My English translation of INFERNO, Canto V, Lines 1 - 24. If you'd like to read along, find a study guide for a deeper understanding of the passage, or even start a conversation with me by dropping a comment to this episode, look for this passage on my website: markscarbrough.com.
[03:17] The descent from the first circle to the second--and thoughts on the increasingly clear geography of hell.
[04:18] Minos, a figure out mythology and into Virgil's AENEID.
[08:02] Minos is a sure judge but he's not a traditional demon from Christian tradition. He's our second mythic figure in INFERNO.
[11:56] Questions about determinism--but more importantly, answers about grace (or at least confession).
[16:49] The judgment itself, as Minos wraps his tail around himself--except this brings up further questions of Limbo and we're reminded again of its strangeness.
[21:18] Hell has a traveler's hostel in its geography! And lots about Virgil: Minos' warning, Virgil's spell that works again, and the strangeness of Virgil himself, the embodiment of the ambivalence of Limbo, leading the pilgrim across the universe.

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