This outstanding work focuses the spotlight on an often-neglected aspect of Kierkegaard’s authorship, arguing that much of it can be read doxologically, as an encomium to such Christian virtues as faith and love. Richard McCombs aptly observes that Kierkegaard was convinced that praising love was an essential strategy for building up love in the neighbor. For Kierkegaard this praise must employ Socratic pedagogy and aesthetic devices, even devious art, because love is offensive to merely human values. McCombs intriguingly suggests that the need for artful strategies is reinforced by the fact that loving properly is also an art, for love requires wisdom and practical know-how. This book emphasizes Kierkegaard’s central contention that all people can become virtuosos of the art of love, artfully expressing essential human equality despite inessential worldly inequalities.
— Lee C. Barrett, Lancaster Theological Seminary
It’s hard to imagine a more illuminating and inspiring study of Kierkegaard’s Works of Love than this one. But it is more. This book proposes that we read his entire authorship in a fresh, new way, as that of a poet whose primary task is to praise things admirable and to evoke our admiration of them. This includes faith, as presented pseudonymously in Fear and Trembling, and then love (in greater detail) as presented in Works of Love. The extensive use of illustrations from Middlemarch and The Brothers Karamazov lends concrete everydayness to the detailed textual analysis.
— Merold Westphal, Fordham University
Boldly violating the shibboleth in Kierkegaard studies regarding the mixing of the esthetic and the ethical-religious spheres of existence, and provocatively situating his proposal within a study of Kierkegaard’s Works of Love, McCombs proposes to reclaim art and esthetics as essential elements of the existential task of ethical-religious striving. Compelling, responsible, and sufficiently nuanced to engage any reader of Kierkegaard who is unwilling to dismiss the undertaking a priori.
— Christopher A.P. Nelson, South Texas College