In this paper I examine various categories of finds from a recent
archaeological investigation at the Monastery of St. Anthony in Egypt.
These finds have yielded new insight into the life of the early monastic
community, the spatial development of the Monastery, and the
Monastery’s trade relations with the outside world. The paper treats
issues such as chronology, self-sufficiency/local specialization, and
fluctuations within the trade relations of the Monastery.
Friday, 8 May 2015
Ky Heinze: Origen's Ransom to the Devil and Porphyry's Sacrifices to Evil Daemons
In this paper, I argue that Origen's use of the Devil in his later commentaries (c.240s) was similar to Porphyry's use of evil daemons in De abstinentia (c.260s).
Heidi Marx-Wolf's recent publications show that Porphyry sought to
discredit traditional animal sacrifices and the ordinary priests who
offered them by saying that they interacted with evil daemons rather
than with the true gods. Marx-Wolf believes that Porphyry learned to use
evil daemons polemically in this way from Origen and the
Judeo-Christian tradition, which portrayed paganism as a religion of
daemons. Marx-Wolf's claim has merit, but I argue that Porphyry's evil
daemons were not simply polemical: they allowed him to reconcile
traditional stories of successful propitiation and blood sacrifice with
his philosophical belief that the gods never accepted such sacrifices.
By saying that evil daemons desired these sacrifices, Porphyry
simultaneously validated tradition and saved his philosophical gods. In
light of this, Porphyry's strategy was not related to Origen's polemic
against pagan religion but to his theory of Jesus' ransom to the Devil.
In 1979, Frances Young observed that, because Origen believed in a
philosophical God without change, anger, or vindictiveness, he could not
understand why the Father would have required the death of his own Son
as a sacrifice or ransom to forgive sins. According to Young, Origen
solved the problem by saying that Jesus had offered himself, not to the
Father, but to the Devil. Thus, both Origen and Porphyry used evil
spirits to reconcile philosophy with their respective religious
traditions.
Henrik Rydell Johnsén: Philosophy and Monastic Formation
Previous ideas about the early desert fathers as predominantly
uneducated have to a great extent determined the scholarly discussion on
the emergence of early monasticism and its relation to ancient
philosophy. With a focus on crucial and typical monastic practices and
virtues like anachōrēsis, hēsychía, repentance, obedience and
repetitious prayer, this paper discusses the emergence of the early
Egyptian and Palestinian monastic movement and its possible dependency
on late antique philosophy.
Lillian Larsen: Re-reading the Material Record of Early Monastic Education
This paper examines the transition from a Graeco-Roman to Christian
school curriculum in light of the material record of monastic education
in Egypt. Through placing extant artifacts and inscriptional evidence in
conversation with broader discussion of ancient/late-ancient
pedagogical practice, it explores both the common and distinctive
elements that characterize expressions of literate investment at
discrete monastic sites. Arguing that the conceptual boundaries that
variously delimit, define and structure classroom environments are
implicit to a broad cross-section of monastic source material, it
considers the degree to which pedagogical elements can usefully inform
readers’ understanding of monastic texts, and effectively elucidate the
physical settings that link text and context.
Theo Kobusch: A New Way to God 'Christian Philosophy': Practical Reason
In "Christian Philosophy", which is the term by which the Christian
author themselves describe their way of thinking from the 4th century
onwards, we can discern a certain tendency which reached its final and
massive breakthrough with the Cappadocian Fathers. This tendency
consisted in circumscribing the divine essence, which according to
Neoplatonism and negative theology is unknowable for theoretical reason,
by increasingly making use of ethical categories. We find a first
indication of this already in the circle of Gregory of Nyssa (Ps-Gregor,
De creatione hominis) where the answer to the question what
Christianity is has ethical implications: Homoiosis Theo. The clearest
example of this tendency is then provided by Gregory of Nyssa himself
who quite often calls God the aretē pantelēs. This, however, is possible
only if the sense of the word aretē is uniform, i.e. the meaning of
moral expressions is the same when applied to God and to man - an idea
that was already formulated by Origen and Gregory Thaumatourgos in the
wake of the Stoics. According to this notion, which is present in Origen
and the Cappadocian Fathers, man is able to come closer to God by a
practical knowledge of himself as it is mentioned in the commentaries to
the Song of Songs. In this way for the Cappadocian Fathers subsequent
to Origen, the way to God seems to be blocked for theoretical reason.
Practical reason, however, does open a new way here.
Monica Tobon: The place of God: apophasis in Evagrius Ponticus
Evagrius' Chapters on Prayer famously characterise the highest
form of prayer as beyond both images and concepts, thus situating their
author within the rich tradition of Christian apophasis whose witnesses
include Gregory of Nyssa's Life of Moses, Pseudo-Dionysius the Areopagite, the Cloud of Unknowing,
John of the Cross and Thomas Merton. Yet despite the vigour of this
tradition the very notion of Christian apophasis remains controversial,
suspected by its critics of failing properly to grasp the significance
of the Incarnation. This paper aims accordingly to clarify the
significance of apophasis in Evagrius. Taking his ‘Gnostic Trilogy' as
paradigmatic of his spiritual system, it will note the likely
Platonic/Neoplatonic/Cappadocian influences upon Evagrius' apophaticism,
explore the role of apophasis in the spiritual life, how it relates to
Evagrius' anthropology and eschatology, and how, far from betraying a
deficient engagement with the reality of the Incarnation, it enables
Evagrius' spirituality to be profoundly incarnational.
Britt Dahlman: Collecting the Apophthegmata Patrum
The richness of Greek manuscripts containing the Apophthegmata Patrum
and the complexity of the collections, compilations and redactions is
well known. Previous research has mainly focused on the large
alphabetic-anonymous and systematic collections, where different stages
in the process of incorporation of small dossiers of various origins and
dates have been identified. "Non-standard" collections, such as the
so-called derived alphabetic-anonymous and systematic ones and the
Sabaitic, have received less attention. However, as they often display
structural and textual parallels with early collections in other
languages such as Latin and Syriac, they are important for the study of
how apophthegmata were transmitted, formed and re-formed.
Robin Jensen: Representations of Teachers and Disciples on Third and Fourth-Century Roman SarcophagiRepresentations of Teachers and Disciples on Third and Fourth-Century Roman Sarcophagi
The depiction of a man reading from a scroll and accompanied by a “muse”
or a teacher among his disciples was a familiar figure on third-century
Roman sarcophagi. Commonly categorized under the general heading of
“philosopher sarcophagi,” art historians often describe these as
signifying a growing interest in representing the deceased as an
idealized, cultured intellectual. The central figure – the learned man –
was usually depicted wearing a tunic and pallium, as well as the
beard, commonly associated with portraits of philosophers. A version of
this figure appears regularly on later, Christian sarcophagi, sometimes
transformed into a depiction of Christ among his apostles, but
occasionally as part of compositions dominated by episodes from
scripture or joined by the good shepherd or female orant. In addition,
standing figures holding scrolls appear are incorporated into certain
biblical narratives, including the scene of John baptizing Jesus. This
paper will briefly review standard art historical interpretations of the
“philosopher” type on non-Christian sarcophagi, and then explore the
possible significance of its adaptation on Christian monuments from the
late third through the mid fourth century, in particular proposing that
the image no longer alludes primarily to the virtues of the secular,
intellectual life, but rather that it presents Christianity as
alternative paideia in which the evangelist is the teacher and knowledge is as much a matter of witness as it is of cultivated reading.
Bo Holmberg: The Early Syriac Reception of the Sayings tradition
The printed texts of the Syriac versions of the Apophthegmata Patrum
(AP) made by Paul Bedjan (1897) and by A. W. Budge (1904) reflect later
compilations of monastic texts collected by the monk Enanisho in the 8th
century. Several Syriac manuscripts containing collections of AP and
dated to the 6th century have come down to us. By studying these older
manuscripts knew insights may be gained with regard to the early Syriac
reception of the Sayings tradition. They are among the earliest
preserved testimonies of the AP found in any language. At least two
different recensions may be discerned and neither of them is strictly
alphabetic or thematic. Like the later compilations of monastic texts,
these manuscripts also juxtapose apophthegmatic and non-apophthegmatic
materials. The order of sayings and the identity of the
non-apophthegmatic texts may throw new light on one of the earliest
attested receptions of the Sayings tradition.
Fernando Rivas Rebaque: Justin Martyr as a Christian organic intellectual in Rome (second century)
In this paper, we will study the figure of Justin Martyr from the concept of
organic intellectual proposed by the Italian thinker Antonio Gramsci, as
opposed to traditional intellectual. While the first one is organically
linked to a class or social group, usually with a progressive and
marginal character, the traditional intellectual, despite their close
contacts with the dominant social groups, considers itself independent
of these ties, maintaining a certain feeling of of caste solidarity and
cohesion.
Robin Young: The Use of the Kephalaia in Evagrius of Pontus
Antoine Guillaumont’s 1962 monograph on the transmission of the
KephalaiaGnostika eastwards among Syriac speakers established Evagrius
of Pontus’ Gnostic Trilogy as the crux interpretationis of Evagrius’
entire literary corpus. Guillaumont concluded that the substance and
style of the three constituent books – Praktikos,Gnostikos and
KephalaiaGnostika – reflected the thought of Origen and presented it in
an esoteric way. Evagrius created the kephalaiaon to hint at a teaching
also – like Origen’s – rooted in the sapiential tradition and in
certain philosophical insights. Evagrius crafted the instrument of the
kephalaiaon to train ascetics toward contemplation.
Based on a new translation of the entire KG made from its Greek and Syriac versions (with comparanda from the Armenian), the papers in this workshop address the purpose, structure and content of various kephalaia. Together they argue for the coherence and for the centrality to Evagrius’ work of the Gnostic Trilogy, and explore how Evagrius linked the kephalaia of each book to connect all three in an elaborately-worked pedagogy. The S2 KG not only reflects Evagrius’ intricate and coherent system of thought; its teachings are also anticipated and reinforced in the kephalaia of the Praktikos and the Gnostikos.
Based on a new translation of the entire KG made from its Greek and Syriac versions (with comparanda from the Armenian), the papers in this workshop address the purpose, structure and content of various kephalaia. Together they argue for the coherence and for the centrality to Evagrius’ work of the Gnostic Trilogy, and explore how Evagrius linked the kephalaia of each book to connect all three in an elaborately-worked pedagogy. The S2 KG not only reflects Evagrius’ intricate and coherent system of thought; its teachings are also anticipated and reinforced in the kephalaia of the Praktikos and the Gnostikos.
Aza Goudriaan: Nicaea: Origin of the Decline of Christianity? Early Modern anti-Trinitarian Historiography and the Protestant Response
Early modern anti-trinitarians, such as Michael Servet and Christian
Francken, criticized the Council of Nicaea (325) for having introduced
Trinitarian dogma and, therefore, initiated the decay of Christianity.
In this perspective, pre-Nicene theology provided a cradle and
confirmation for anti-trinitarian theology. This theological
historiography and its rebuttal by Protestants such as Franciscus Junius
and Amandus Polanus involved the construction of competing patristic
arguments. Several of these arguments are analyzed in this paper.
Luke Dysinger, OSB: Deification in Benedict of Nursia and Gregory the Great
The relationship between the Rule of Benedict and the writings of
Gregory the Great is complex and controversial. Each depicts contexts
in which the Christian is able to recover and manifest to others aspects
of primordial glory. The Rule of St. Benedict presumes an anticipation
of eschatological renewal and transformation that occurs within the
Christian community. With "eyes open to the deifying light" the
innermost heart "expands in God" as members of the cenobium learn to
honor and revere what they see each other becoming. In Gregory the
Great the "uncircumscribed light of God" transforms the Christian
ascetic into a contemplative who helps others to behold transcendent
realities in ordinary circumstances.
Einar Thomassen: Were there Valentinian schools?
Gnostic groups have often been spoken of as ‘schools’. In particular,
this has been common with regard to groups that appear to have been
centred around a teacher, such as Valentinus and Basilides. But how
pertinent is the comparison with philosophical schools? The paper will
take a fresh look at the evidence for teaching activities in
Valentinianism as far as the existence of such activities may be
inferred from the sources themselves. Did classroom teaching exist as a
separate activity in addition to religious services and rituals? Were
the contents and methods of teaching comparable to those of the
philosophical schools? It will be argued that teaching in the form of
exegesis, theoretical exposition and diatribe was indeed practiced in
Valentinian circles, but the Valentinian teachers did not see themselves
as philosophers and important differences vis-à-vis philosophical
teaching must be pointed out.
Jeremy Bergstrom: Augustine on the Judgment of Conscience and the Glory of Man
This paper seeks to explore the relationship between the conscience
and discernment, or judgment. Augustine's own application of conscience
seems to be primarily directed at the discernment of one's own motives,
in accordance with the testimony of Christ the interior teacher, and the
Holy Ghost shedding abroad within our hearts. This discernment
recognizes the truthfulness of one's own life, that is, whether or not
it is established and continuing in love, and also learns to discern, in
a hesitant way, the truthfulness of the lives of others.
My discussion will analyze Augustine's use of Paul's Corinthian correspondence, especially 1 Corinthians 2.11 (For what person knows a man's thoughts except the spirit of the man which is in him? So also no one comprehends the thoughts of God except the Spirit of God), and 2 Corinthians 1.12 (For our boast (gloria) is this, the testimony of our conscience that we have behaved in the world, and still more toward you, with holiness and godly sincerity, not by earthly wisdom but by the grace of God). I will argue, through extensive use of Augustine's corpus, that he believes the peace of a good conscience enables not only discernment of the truth, according to the will of God, but the confidence and hope to realize the truth for oneself, a sentiment which in turn is based upon his reading of 1 Corinthians 2.15 (The spiritual man judges all things, but is himself to be judged by no one).
My discussion will analyze Augustine's use of Paul's Corinthian correspondence, especially 1 Corinthians 2.11 (For what person knows a man's thoughts except the spirit of the man which is in him? So also no one comprehends the thoughts of God except the Spirit of God), and 2 Corinthians 1.12 (For our boast (gloria) is this, the testimony of our conscience that we have behaved in the world, and still more toward you, with holiness and godly sincerity, not by earthly wisdom but by the grace of God). I will argue, through extensive use of Augustine's corpus, that he believes the peace of a good conscience enables not only discernment of the truth, according to the will of God, but the confidence and hope to realize the truth for oneself, a sentiment which in turn is based upon his reading of 1 Corinthians 2.15 (The spiritual man judges all things, but is himself to be judged by no one).
Diana Stanciu: Conscientia, capax Dei and salvation in Augustine
I will consider conscientia in Augustine as related to his notion of
capax Dei, the human capacity to ‘connect’ to God and be saved. I will
concentrate on the Adnotationes in Iob, where Augustine mentions ‘the
peace human beings enjoy in their conscience with the remission of sin
due to grace’ and on In Iohannis Evangelium tractatus, where Augustine
touches upon ‘the happiness of humans who have God in their conscience
as others have gold in their coffers’, ‘the human conscience set in
motion’ [by grace], love (caritas) that comes ‘from a pure heart, a good
conscience and an unfeigned faith’ (I Tim. 1.5) (idea also brought up
in De Trinitate), and ‘conscience in the presence of God’ (coram deo). I
will not neglect the mainstream discussions of Augustine’s conscientia
as related to the intellect and to knowledge as illumination (especially
with referrence to De magistro, the Confessiones and the Enchiridion)
and their relationship to similar discussions on capax Dei/ imago Dei,
but I will refer primarily to the emotional/ volitional aspects. For
instance, in his In Iohannis Evangelium tractatus, Augustine associates
conscience with the heart (conscientia cordis) and so does he in
De diversis quaestionibus octoginta tribus. These suggestions fit
Augustine’s referrences (also in emotional/volitional terms) to the
human ‘capacity for beatitude’ (beatitudinis capax), the ‘capacity for
the supreme nature’ (summae naturae capax) [that is for God] (De
Trinitate), or the ‘capacity for the divine realm’ (capax regni Dei)
(Enarrationes in Psalmos).
Francesco Pieri: Tertullian's insights on Christian initiation
Baptism seems to have been understood during the first Christian
generations more as a ritual of aggregation to the community, essentialy
based on the imitation of Christ's humility and repentance pattern,
rather than a ritual performing a man's ontological transformation.
Being the first western treatise entirely devoted to a/this "sacrament",
Tertullian's On Baptism allows us to better understand the shift in
conciousness and meaning attributed to a ritual system that marked
Christianity in the third century.
Carl Griffin: Vessel of Wrath: Judas Iscariot in Cyrillona
The character of Judas features in three Syriac poems by Cyrillona
(fl. 399) on the Last Supper and Last Discourse of Jesus. This paper
explores the role that Cyrillona creates for Judas as a shocking example
of Christ-betrayal, as an antitype of Jesus and the faithful disciples,
and as an agent of Jewish intrigue. Judas's dramatic and symbolic
potential is cultivated to propel the narrative, but Cyrillona also
reveals distinctive exegetical and theological interests in his
consideration of the washing of the feet, the giving of the sop, and
Judas's departure from the Cenacle. While tracing the lines of reception
that connect Cyrillona with earlier Syriac tradition, I also consider
ways in which Cyrillona prefigures later dramatizations of Judas.
Adrian Brandli: A question of belonging: Perpetua and the family of Christ (WS 0175)
The Passion of Perpetua is arguably one of the most
imaginative Christian texts that have come down to us from antiquity. It
tells the story of a group of Christians who were martyred at Carthage
on the occasion of emperor Getha’s birthday in 203. Particularly
prominent is the report about 22-year-old Vibia Perpetua, including some
kind of a prison diary that seems to feature her own words. In this
report, her path from a mere catechumen to a baptized Christian, who was
about to undergo the torments of martyrdom, is depicted as the
renunciation of her worldly kinship relations in favour of a new kind of
family that features Christ as the worthy replacement for the actual
father. Interestingly, this change of paradigm does not simply build on a
revision of notions of filial obligation (such as pietas) to
explain the dissociation with one and the affiliation with another
father figure but intertwines Roman moral thought with biblical motifs,
thereby producing a unique conflation of two distinct lines of
tradition. Starting from these observations, it is the aim of the paper
to elucidate Perpetua’s shift from one household model to the other
against the backdrop of these traditions. Thus, the analysis of the text
will focus on both the moral expectations that were associated with the
Roman household and the biblical imagery, which allocated a place in
the Christian family to Perpetua.
Michael Hollerich: Valesius and Eusebius' Ecclesiastical History: Scholarship and Politics in the Republic of Letters
As part of a project on the reception of Eusebius of Caesarea's
Ecclesiastical History, I am submitting a proposal for a short
communication on the critical edition of Eusebius' history published by
Henri de Valois (Valesius) in 1659. I will set the edition in its
contemporary context, indicate the primary purposes underlying it, and
examine selected annotations in the edition that illustrate what
features of Eusebius' history particularly drew his attention. I will
argue that Valois pitched his project to his ecclesiastical and royal
patrons in ways that balanced utility and scholarly impartiality, at a
time in French ecclesiastical life when reliable access to tradition was
especially important.
Marc Doucet: Grégoire le Grand : itinéraire personnel du croyant et profession de foi
On connaît la profession de foi de Grégoire le Grand, qu'il envoie aux
patriarches, lors de son accession au siège de Pierre : fermeté,
précision, clarté. Pourtant contraste mais non opposition au long de
ses écrits, on peut découvrir un Grégoire qui cherche à approfondir
l'intelligence de sa foi. Se poser des questions n'est pas forcément
douter.
Marcello La Matina: The homiletic turn in Gregory of Nyssa’s work. A brief study on De Vita Moysis and In Canticum canticorum
According to the common opinion today, the works written and/or
preserved under the name of Gregory of Nyssa might be divided in two
main classes: treatises and homilies. The first ones are commonly censed
as having a doctrinal clue: despite their occasional character has
been the author (or may be by his editors) gave them a theoretical
structure, so that they were subtracted to the circumstantial boundaries
of their own composition, thus, becoming a well-definite corpus of
theological works. The second group of works has perhaps the same origin
of the first ones, but create a different story. Homilies were born in
the activity of preaching, whereas the theoretical works have become
treatises. Homilies are many-facetted texts ranging over multifarious
topics.
Informed by Plutarch of Chaeronea, I read Gregory especially as a performer, a speaker, not only in his homiletic texts. His works were somehow two-step texts. For, first, they were held as lectures or conferences, and then fixed and revised in order to explicate — or to polish — the logical and rhetorical architecture. If it is so, then Gregory is to be considered a homilist, an oral philosopher, whose prevalent activity is talking before his audience rather than writing in the lonely frame of a monastic cell.
Informed by Plutarch of Chaeronea, I read Gregory especially as a performer, a speaker, not only in his homiletic texts. His works were somehow two-step texts. For, first, they were held as lectures or conferences, and then fixed and revised in order to explicate — or to polish — the logical and rhetorical architecture. If it is so, then Gregory is to be considered a homilist, an oral philosopher, whose prevalent activity is talking before his audience rather than writing in the lonely frame of a monastic cell.
Franchi Roberta: Muliercularum socii (Hier., Ep. 133,4): Donne ed eresia nell'Epistolario di Gerolamo
L’epistolario di Gerolamo offre materiale interessante per analizzare
il rapporto tra donne ed eresia nel IV secolo. Nel mondo cristiano è
ben noto che tra i seguaci di sette eretiche vi era un gran numero di
signore e giovani ragazze. Il concetto di donna come "naturalmente"
incline all'eresia è il risultato sia del concetto di debolezza
femminile sia la dimostrazione della presenza femminile tra sette
eretiche, soprattutto nel periodo della "Grande Chiesa". Gerolamo
presenta donne eretiche, compagne dei più famosi leaders eretici, o donne che svolgono un ruolo rilevante nell’eresia in varie lettere, usando in alcuni casi le parole della Seconda Lettera a Timoteo
(3:6-7). Se le donne eretiche seguono falsi monaci ed eretici, tanto
che non possiamo considerarle vergini ma prostitute, d'altra parte
quelle donne, che sono seguaci della retta dottrina ortodossa, sono
profondamente radicate nella tradizione cristiana: per loro la Sacra
Scrittura è il punto di partenza per venire alla conoscenza della
verità, mentre l'insania delle donne eretiche può essere definita come
l'incapacità di osservare le Sacre Scritture. Analizzando alcune lettere
si cercherà di ricreare i ritratti di quelle donne, che prendono parte
alle controversie religiose, diventando protagoniste attive.
Stefan Rebenich: History in Cyril
The paper discusses the use and abuse of history in Cyril of Alexandria's Against Julian.
Finbarr Clancy: The Church in St Ambrose's Homilies on the Hexameron
St Ambrose delivered nine homilies on the Hexameron on successive
days, probably in Holy Week, in AD 387. This Short Communication aims
to gather together his reflections on the Church in the course of these
homilies. His chief comments on the Church occur in homilies 4-6,
dealing with the third and fourth days of creation. Isolated comments
also occur in the other homilies. The Church is variously associated
with the Trinity, the waters of creation, the fluctuating phases of the
moon, and the colourful seeds withing the pomegranate fruit. Ambrose
also links the Church with various characteristics of both trees and
plants, and with bridal imagery. The Church is discussed in relation to
the Synagogue and the Gentiles. He often draws moral lessons from the
details of creation which are applicabel do the daily life of the
Church's members. The Hexameron homilies draw heavily on imagery
form the Song of Songs. Ambrose's possible indebtedness to Basil of
Caesarea's homilies on the Hexameron, a text with which he was familiar, will also be briefly explored.
Isabela Stoian: Synonymy and Antonymy in St. Gregory the Great's Gospel Homilies
The numerous series of synonyms and antonyms in the Gospel Homilies
render the teachings of Gregory the Great clear and properly received by
the public. Synonymy has a specific intention and surpasses the simple
need for variety. Such is the case of caro and corpus, which are used
without a clear distinction. However, caro seems to be more connected to
the idea of sin. On the other hand, corpus is seen as a whole, unitary,
and as a symbol for what is earthly, not necessarily for sin. This is
maybe one reason for which Christians do not eat caro Christi but corpus
Christi.
Antonyms are usually used in pairs with a particular purpose, frequently that of emphasizing the differences between this world and the other world, between wicked and right persons, between humanity and divinity. The most interesting antonyms are those created by opposing terms that originally express non-opposing ideas. For instance, Gregory urges the congregation to know the Truth of God non per fidem, sed per amorem. [...] non ex credulitate, sed ex operatione - Hom. Ev. XIV, 5. When he opposes the terms fides and amor, credulitas and operatio, he points out the difference between the active and the passive forms of getting to know God and of serving Him.
Through synonyms and antonyms, not only did Gregory wrap his profound ideas in the coat of lexical variety, but he also emphasized theological concepts, making his speeches clear and complex.
Antonyms are usually used in pairs with a particular purpose, frequently that of emphasizing the differences between this world and the other world, between wicked and right persons, between humanity and divinity. The most interesting antonyms are those created by opposing terms that originally express non-opposing ideas. For instance, Gregory urges the congregation to know the Truth of God non per fidem, sed per amorem. [...] non ex credulitate, sed ex operatione - Hom. Ev. XIV, 5. When he opposes the terms fides and amor, credulitas and operatio, he points out the difference between the active and the passive forms of getting to know God and of serving Him.
Through synonyms and antonyms, not only did Gregory wrap his profound ideas in the coat of lexical variety, but he also emphasized theological concepts, making his speeches clear and complex.
Scott Johnson: Historiography in Verse Exegesis: The Syriac Tradition and Romanos the Melode on 1–2 Kings
Several Syriac poems dealing with episodes in 1–2 Kings survive from
Late Antiquity. These poems cover various stories, but scenes from the
life of Elijah are most prominent. In this paper I will consider poems
by Ephrem, Narsai, Jacob of Serugh, and Romanos the Melode (in Greek) in
an effort to investigate how Kings was treated as a historiographical
model by late antique poets in the East. This investigation focuses on
how authoritative biblical texts shaped the habits of talking about the
past in the Syriac tradition. These poets shared a collective memory,
not least through liturgical celebration, which served their poetry both
by providing content but also by framing their discourse about
past events. This paper is not intended as a survey of the exegetical
tradition on Kings but, instead, explores how exegetical poetry set
cultural habits for claiming the biblical past in the Syriac tradition.
The regular recitation of liturgical hymns meant that patterns of
thinking about the past permeated into other genres of Syriac
literature, such as prose exegesis and commentary, prose homiletics,
epistlography, and historiography. With regard to historiography, this
paper will close with a meditation on how the emergent chronicle
tradition in Syriac took inspiration from both Greek ecclesiastical
historical writing, represented by very early translations of Eusebius,
as well as from the indigenous Syriac poetical tradition. In this fusing
of horizons between poetry and historiography, specific perspectives on
history and the past will be put forward as characteristic of Syriac
writing in Late Antiquity.
Camille Gerzaguet: Preaching in Northern Italy (360-450) : A Pedagogy of Faith
As far as Italy is concerned, several
collections of sermons of the IVth and Vth
centuries have been kept. Among them, the sermons of Zeno of Verona,
Gaudentius of Brescia, Chromatius of Aquileia, Maximus of Turin,
Peter Chrysologus (for Ambrose of Milan, Explanationes in XII
palmos and De sacramentis are concerned) provide a
consistent and coherent set of a geographically and culturally
bounded area. The paper shall consider the role of sermons over the
period from the 360s to the 450s in Northern Italy in a twofold
perspective. It is actually about understanding the extent to which
preaching, as a major driver of faith, served as a means of unifying
and spreading the ecclesia. It is also about analyzing how
preaching was also used to categorize individuals according to their
degree of spiritual advancement by creating some boundaries inside
the community. Becoming Christian in Late Antiquity implied to follow
a spiritual progression which could be enlighted by the study of
preaching. As rallying as splitting point, the sermon established the
place of the faithful in Church. From a liturgical point of view, I
will focus then on the lectures that were marked out for some of
these status, especially catechumeni, competentes,
neophyti (for example, the lifes of the Patriarchs were read
to the competentes in Milan), and on the exegetical discourse,
spiritual or moral, that was related to these lectures. Such an
analysis on sermons must also include a sociological approach.
Therefore, it will highlight the variety and composition of
audiences: was it really a selection that came to worship (MacMullen
1989) ? Did that make a difference preaching in a small town or
in an imperial capital ? Finally, the interactions between preachers
and audiences (adresses, questions etc.) will be analyzed from
a pastoral point view. The whole approach should help to understand
how the process of becoming Christian was anchored in a pedagogy of
faith.
Bella Image: Becoming Christian: the Roman Senate in the period up to Constantine
This paper addresses the question of ‘becoming Christian' not for an individual, but for a body: the senatorial class of Rome.
The people of Rome, and in particular the senatorial class, are often characterized in academic literature as the last bastion of traditional Roman religion. However, this may be skewed by interest in the so-called ‘pagan revival' of the late fourth century. Yet the case for senatorial disinterest in Christianity in the third century is in fact mere argument 'ex silentio' arising from the paucity of evidence. This paper therefore reviews the signs of Christianity for the period up to the reign of Constantine, and parallels this with evidence for a decline in traditional religion in the same period among the senatorial classes. It will be argued that, as an urban group, the senatorial class in Rome may have even led the way in Christianisation more than often thought.
The people of Rome, and in particular the senatorial class, are often characterized in academic literature as the last bastion of traditional Roman religion. However, this may be skewed by interest in the so-called ‘pagan revival' of the late fourth century. Yet the case for senatorial disinterest in Christianity in the third century is in fact mere argument 'ex silentio' arising from the paucity of evidence. This paper therefore reviews the signs of Christianity for the period up to the reign of Constantine, and parallels this with evidence for a decline in traditional religion in the same period among the senatorial classes. It will be argued that, as an urban group, the senatorial class in Rome may have even led the way in Christianisation more than often thought.
Bronwen Neil: Reception of Late-Antique Popes in the Middle Ages and Beyond
Leo the Great (440-61) and Gregory the Great (590-604) earned their
epithets in different ways, Leo by his intervention at the Council of
Chalcedon via one momentous letter known as the Tome (Ep. 28), and
Gregory by his spiritual direction, civic leadership, and his prolific
publication of works in various genres, some of which were taken up by
the Eastern church. This paper looks at how other late-antique popes
were received in the Middle Ages, and used to promote particular agenda.
It considers what kind of contribution to eastern-western Church
relations was required for a pope to be remembered beyond the century in
which he lived. It will be argued that successful mediation between the
Roman and Byzantine churches was a prerequisite for a lasting impact on
later ages. This impact can be measured by the continued popularity of
their works, whether in Latin or in translations into Greek and other
vernaculars. The proliferation of early and late medieval Lives of Roman
bishops also testifies to their importance throughout Europe, both in
Byzantium and the medieval West up to the Renaissance.
Christos Simelidis: Emotions in the poems of Gregory of Nazianzus
This paper studies the presence of emotions in the autobiographical
and epigrammatic poetry of Gregory of Nazianzus. Gregory's poetic corpus
includes emotional descriptions of personal events, poems on specific
emotions (e.g. I.2.25 κατὰ θυμοῦ ‘against anger') or passions (e.g.
I.2.28 κατὰ πλεονεξίας ‘against covetousness'), as well as fifty
funerary epigrams on his mother and more than eighty against
grave-robbers. The paper explores the function of emotions in the
self-portrait and didactic argumentation of one of the most respected
and imitated patristic authors.
Blake Leyerle: John Chrysostom’s Strategic Use of Fear
John Chrysostom spoke often about fear, not only in the wake of actual
situations of terror, such as the Riot of the Statues, when the populace
as a whole quaked in fear, but also in the course of his regular
preaching, when he deliberately evoked dread in his listeners by
conjuring imaginative scenarios of punishment. So useful was fear in his
estimation that the preacher openly wished that he could “always and
continually speak about Hell” (De Laz. 2.3, PG 48. 985). Such
unalloyed enthusiasm suggests a strongly disciplinary agenda, and we
know that Chrysostom was indeed focused on the moral reformation of his
listeners. Fear was a useful ally not only in restraining his listeners
from immoral tendencies but also in spurring them to ethical actions.
But fear, as Aristotle noted, is a complex emotion and Chrysostom was,
among other things, a very astute observer of human nature. This paper
argues, accordingly, that Chrysostom’s appreciation of fear springs not
only from its disciplinary utility but also from its capacity to enhance
group solidarity and, perhaps most signally, to promote a deliberate
state in which values are reassessed and temporal frames clarified.
Robert Kitchen: Three Young Men Redux: The Fiery Furnace in Jacob of Sarug and Narsai
The vast corpuses of the metrical homilies of Jacob of Sarug and
Narsai utilize a genre rarely employed by other early Christian writers,
and therefore, not easily analyzed and comparable. Jacob (d. 521) and
Narsai (d. 502) are roughly contemporaries, but separated significantly
by geography (Syria, Persia) and confessional allegiance (Miaphysite,
Church of the East). Their relationship is unclear, although different
sources claim important connections in themes, motifs and approaches,
even a kind of rivalry, which appear to arise out of early schooling in
Edessa, and therefore, sharing the heritage and methods of Ephrem.
The aim here will be to compare the homilies of both authors on the same Biblical narrative, the Three Young Men in the Fiery Furnace (Daniel 3), focusing on the Biblical exegeses and figurative typologies utilized by each author in contrast to and in complement of each other.
Narsai's mēmrā is entitled "On Ḥananyā and ‘Azaryā and Mīshā'ēl," of medium length, 474 lines. Jacob entitles his mēmrā "On Daniel and the House of Ḥananyā," and is significantly longer, 872 lines. Both authors call the Three Young Men by their Greek LXX names, instead of the traditional Shadrach, Meshach and Abednego of the Hebrew canon and Peshiṭta.
The aim here will be to compare the homilies of both authors on the same Biblical narrative, the Three Young Men in the Fiery Furnace (Daniel 3), focusing on the Biblical exegeses and figurative typologies utilized by each author in contrast to and in complement of each other.
Narsai's mēmrā is entitled "On Ḥananyā and ‘Azaryā and Mīshā'ēl," of medium length, 474 lines. Jacob entitles his mēmrā "On Daniel and the House of Ḥananyā," and is significantly longer, 872 lines. Both authors call the Three Young Men by their Greek LXX names, instead of the traditional Shadrach, Meshach and Abednego of the Hebrew canon and Peshiṭta.
Margaret Lane: Naked is the abyss of human consciousness Nuda est abyssum humanae conscientiae
This is a quotation from Confessions 10:2:2 and denotes our transparency
to God which contrasts with our obscurity to ourselves and other
people. Augustine speaks frequently of our need to return to our
conscientia and to inspect or interrogate it. This examination of
conscience or state of consciousness looks back to the old Stoic
practice of vigilance or attentiveness and forward to the Examen of St
Ignatius. With the practice of self examination, Augustine believes we
can become more, though not completely, transparent to ourselves, coming
to know ourselves as we are known by God. My paper will look at the
method of self examination that Augustine recommends in order to arrive
at naked self-awareness, from which I hope it will be clear that what
Augustine is advocating is more in the nature of a practice of
mindfulness than something akin to the Examen of St Ignatius.
Matthieu Pignot: The catechumenate in pseudo-epigraphic sermons from late antique Africa
In late Antiquity, individuals wanting to become Christian went
through a progressive integration called the catechumenate by modern
scholars. In ancient sources from the Latin West, this involved a
two-stage membership: converts would first become members of the
community as catechumeni (hearers), while full belonging was acquired by
petitioning for the status of fidelis (faithful) and receiving baptism
after intense preparation. This organisation still remains widely
unknown because of the lack of sources providing clear accounts of how
it was organised and lived. In Africa, Augustine of Hippo and
Quodvultdeus of Carthage, and particularly their sermons, provide the
most visible and studied evidence, in the form of occasional and
dispersed references. After the 450s, sources become scarce with very
few sermons preserved with an authorship.
The objective of this paper is to extend the study of the catechumenate in Africa in the fourth, fifth and sixth centuries by exploring the less-known and little studied pseudo-epigraphic sermons preserved from the period. The pseudo-Augustinus, pseudo-Chrysostomus, pseudo-Maximus and pseudo-Fulgentius collections have much to offer on rites of initiation and catechesis implemented during the catechumenate. While many of the texts found amongst these collections have been ascribed to new authors, a large amount still remains anonymous. Isolating, in this corpus, the texts ascribed to late antique Africa, I shall provide a brief account of their potential contribution to our understanding of the catechumenate in late Antiquity, and reflect on their impact on the broader history of initiation as told by better-known patristic sources.
The objective of this paper is to extend the study of the catechumenate in Africa in the fourth, fifth and sixth centuries by exploring the less-known and little studied pseudo-epigraphic sermons preserved from the period. The pseudo-Augustinus, pseudo-Chrysostomus, pseudo-Maximus and pseudo-Fulgentius collections have much to offer on rites of initiation and catechesis implemented during the catechumenate. While many of the texts found amongst these collections have been ascribed to new authors, a large amount still remains anonymous. Isolating, in this corpus, the texts ascribed to late antique Africa, I shall provide a brief account of their potential contribution to our understanding of the catechumenate in late Antiquity, and reflect on their impact on the broader history of initiation as told by better-known patristic sources.
Martin Hinterberger: The Fathers' Methodology of Treating Emotions
In this paper I intend to investigate the way Basil of Caesarea and
Gregory of Nazianz approached emotions in their literary output. For
this aim I shall undertake primarily a comparison of three texts which
share the same author or the same topic: Basil wrote both a Homily on
Anger and on Envy while among Gregory's numerous poems one of the most
extensive ones is about Anger. Among other things, the comparison will
show common structural characteristics of these texts as well as a
similar treatment of sources. All three texts show how their authors
incorporated Ancient/Late Antique philosophical learning into a
Christian worldview. Furthermore, I shall demonstrate the lasting impact
of these treatises on Byzantine thinking about emotions and the
modification Basil's and Gregory's statements underwent during the
subsequent centuries.
Thursday, 7 May 2015
Christian Teachers in Second-Century Rome
Christian intellectuals such as Valentinus, Justin, and Marcion have received a good deal of attention when it comes to their role in the development of early Christianity. In recent years, a new appreciation for the different strands of belief they represent has come to be widely shared by a generation of scholars seeking to think beyond the boundaries of traditional theological and historical categories. The workshop we propose, dedicated to Christian teachers and their students in second-century Rome, situates itself in this open field of inquiry. We strive to understand these individuals not simply as placeholders in the history of doctrine but rather as teachers pursuing their livelihood in the marvelously complicated fabric of urban Rome: seeking spaces in which to live and teach, attracting students, cultivating patrons, interacting with texts, and engaging in polemics with other teachers. These teachers and their students participated simultaneously in other social, commercial, and ethnic networks, and these networks will have played important roles when it came to establishing and maintaining social contacts and connections. Christian “schools” also shared many features with other groups of philosophers, litterateurs, sophists, and physicians, and a great deal can be learned by careful comparison with such groups. With this framework in mind, participants will offer papers on important second-century Christian teachers that worked in Rome: Justin Martyr (Fernando Rivas Rebaque), Valentinus (Christoph Markschies), the question of Valentinian “schools” (Einar Thomassen), Tatian (Miguel Herrero de Jauregui), Theodotus and his followers (H. Gregory Snyder), and Hippolytus (Marek Raczkiewicz). Other papers deal with comparative issues or broader themes: the artistic representation of teachers in Roman art (Robin Jensen), the social context for Marcion, making connections to Jewish groups (Judith Lieu), and an overview of Christian “schools” (Angelo de Berardino). Contributors to the workshop have latitude to pursue questions of particular interest to themselves in whatever ways they see fit, but the overarching goal of the workshop is a richer and more nuanced understanding of what it meant to be a Christian teacher in second-century Rome.
Ariane Bodin: Identifying the signs of Christianness in late antique Italy and Africa
The question at stake in this paper is how to identify a Christian in
the Roman Society. It is now widely admitted that Christians cannot be
recognized through their clothes in Late Antiquity, except for those
converted to asceticism. Christians rarely revealed their identity in
texts, but we can analyse some signs likely to reveal one’s
christianness or religious conversion. First of all, there exists a
number of other outward signs that allows one to tell who is Christian.
All Romans – pagans, Jews or Christians – sought protection by wearing
phylacteries around their neck. As for the Christians, their amulets or
phylacteries are connected to the cult of the saints, since reliquary
phylacteries could serve as suspension capsules or containers for holy
relics. Christian phylacteries were by manifold aspects a threat against
relics privatization led by clerics as it has been demonstrated by
Peter Brown. But all christians cannot wear relics around their neck
either because of their cost, or because the events prevent them from
doing so. Secondly, Christian identity can be retrieved from texts and
inscriptions through visual signs, such as Christian symbols (ie cross,
Chi Rho, christogram). Onomastic change due to conversion to
Christianity are attested in the post-Constantinian period. Some new
Christians may use additional cognomen to show their faith in Christ,
such as martyrial names, theophoric names, or names proving a process of
religious change. Finally, studying the social network of Romans may
also reveal religious changes such as Christianness.
Michael Simmons: Exegesis and Hermeneutics in Eusebius of Caesarea's Theophany (Book IV): The Contemporary Fulfillment of Jesus' Prophecies
The original Greek text of Eusebius' Theophany is lost,
surviving only in 17 fragments. A Syriac translation of the work written
in the early fifth century has preserved all five books. Samuel Lee
published the first edition of the Syriac text in 1842 and an English
translation with notes the following year. Hugo Gressmann's German
translation (1904) published in Band III.2 of the Griechischen Christlichen Schriftsteller compared the Syriac translation of the Theoph. with parallel Greek texts of various Eusebian works, the Greek fragments of the Theophany,
and biblical passages, concluding that, on the whole, the Syriac
translation is faithful to the original Greek. A number of scholars
(Lightfoot [1880]; Gressmann [1904]; Quasten [1975]; Frede [1999]); and
Kofsky [2002]) proposed that Theoph.Bk.IV was based on an earlier work devoted to the prophecies of Christ mentioned by Eusebius in the PE
I.3. By offering a comparative philological study of the parallel Greek
and Syriac passages of Book IV (12 of the 17 fragments come from this
book, or 70.58%), this paper analyzes Eusebius' exegetical and
hermeneutical method in conjunction with the overarching soteriological
argument developed around a number of sub-themes in which he attempts to
prove the fulfillment of Christ's predictions in contemporary society, a hermeneutic unique to Eusebius' apologies. A
thorough analysis of the exegetical method which Eusebius applies to
the 166 scriptural citations found in Book IV may help the modern
historian to better understand the venue and purpose of this last
apology of the bishop of Caesarea.
Rafal Toczko: The Shipwrecks and Philosophers: The Rhetoric of Aristocratic Conversion in the Late 4th and Early 5th Centuries
In this study the literary aspects of the conversion to Christianity
will be discussed. It has been based on the letters of Ambrose, Jerome,
Augustine, Paulinus of Nola, and Uranus. Letters were a very effective
medium of the early Christian public relations and conversion of a
member of aristocracy was always a phenomenon that ought to have been
celebrated and communicated. The form and style of communication e.g.
the metaphors used in trumpeting the new noble Christian can give us
insight not only into the art of rhetoric but also into the
epistemological ramifications, imaginary schemes that constituted
thinking of the aristocracy in times when Christian life became an
attractive choice.
The goal of this study is to present the detailed picture and systematization of the various modes in which conversion was treated as a literary theme in the correspondence of the studied period. The paper will focus on two different literary phenomena: 1. The rhetoric of persuading to conversion 2. The literary descriptions of famous aristocratic conversions. The first part will present the sophisticated rhetoric of Augustine persuading Volusianus and Licentius to become Christians. The second part will offer discussion of the symbolic language used in letters celebrating the conversion of Paulinus, Paula, Fabiola et al. I will contextualize the roots of the early Christian rhetoric of conversion and conclude with some remarks corresponding with the modern theories of metaphor that could possibly be helpful in reconstructing the thought pattern of the Roman aristocracy in the studied period.
The goal of this study is to present the detailed picture and systematization of the various modes in which conversion was treated as a literary theme in the correspondence of the studied period. The paper will focus on two different literary phenomena: 1. The rhetoric of persuading to conversion 2. The literary descriptions of famous aristocratic conversions. The first part will present the sophisticated rhetoric of Augustine persuading Volusianus and Licentius to become Christians. The second part will offer discussion of the symbolic language used in letters celebrating the conversion of Paulinus, Paula, Fabiola et al. I will contextualize the roots of the early Christian rhetoric of conversion and conclude with some remarks corresponding with the modern theories of metaphor that could possibly be helpful in reconstructing the thought pattern of the Roman aristocracy in the studied period.
Pauline Nugent: Jerome and Augustine: the Human behind the Literary Façade
Although the lives of Sts. Jerome (ca.331-420) and Augustine
(354-430), bridged the same two centuries, one would be hard pressed to
claim that they held much else in common. Both were early Church
Fathers with remarkably disparate gifts: the elder a unique trilinguist,
the younger a theological philosopher, both prolific writers who
bequeathed priceless legacies to posterity. But behind their literary
façades one may also discover glimpses into the private, emotional, and
inner lives of these two Christian giants.
Even a cursory reading of Augustine’s Confessions, readily yields multiple personal insights, for within its pages the saint bares his soul to God, always conscious of his future readers. Speaking at the time of his mother’s death, he says: “Legat ut volet et interpretetur ut volet et si peccatum invenerit … non rideat …(IX.12.33).
While Jerome’s inner life is not always so blatantly explicit in his writings as is that of his junior contemporary, it is nonetheless possible to draw back the veil of privacy and peer deeply into his emotional state. I propose to do this by concentrating on his Prologues to the Prophetic Books of the Bible. These Prologues contain insights of a very personal nature that allow one to define the natural dispositions and temperament of the author and compare and contrast them with those of Augustine. This will produce a new and vibrant personal portrait of these early Church Fathers.
Even a cursory reading of Augustine’s Confessions, readily yields multiple personal insights, for within its pages the saint bares his soul to God, always conscious of his future readers. Speaking at the time of his mother’s death, he says: “Legat ut volet et interpretetur ut volet et si peccatum invenerit … non rideat …(IX.12.33).
While Jerome’s inner life is not always so blatantly explicit in his writings as is that of his junior contemporary, it is nonetheless possible to draw back the veil of privacy and peer deeply into his emotional state. I propose to do this by concentrating on his Prologues to the Prophetic Books of the Bible. These Prologues contain insights of a very personal nature that allow one to define the natural dispositions and temperament of the author and compare and contrast them with those of Augustine. This will produce a new and vibrant personal portrait of these early Church Fathers.
Makiko Sato: Confession of Human Being as Darkness in Augustine
Augustine is known well for describing human beings as darkness.
Especially in his Confessiones, we find many such descriptions. Through
these descriptions, Augustine points out the imperfection of our
knowledge and the inevitable difficulty of controlling our will.
According to him, we human beings, even Apostles, are dark deep (Conf.
13, 13, 14), and we cannot distinguish between us, between "sons of
night" and "sons of light," which only God can do (Conf. 13, 14, 15).
Such a view of human nature becomes the base of Augustine's idea in the
Augustinian/Pelagian dispute later.
In contrast, Augustine says in his Retractationes that the book Confessiones praises the just and good God for both the bad and the good that he did (Retr. 2, 6, 2). The acts against God, such as stealing pears and the devotion to Manichaeism, actually seem to be regarded as bad, and the acts toward God, such as the conversion and mystical experiences, seem to be regarded as good. In general, the act of confession can always consist along with the person's recognition of the bad and the good.
However, from the view of "human being as darkness," we have to say that such recognition is always uncertain. Then, what can we "confess"? What can "I-darkness" say about "I-darkness"? In this paper, I will clarify the relationship between the act of confession as speech and the view of human beings as darkness in Augustine's thought.
In contrast, Augustine says in his Retractationes that the book Confessiones praises the just and good God for both the bad and the good that he did (Retr. 2, 6, 2). The acts against God, such as stealing pears and the devotion to Manichaeism, actually seem to be regarded as bad, and the acts toward God, such as the conversion and mystical experiences, seem to be regarded as good. In general, the act of confession can always consist along with the person's recognition of the bad and the good.
However, from the view of "human being as darkness," we have to say that such recognition is always uncertain. Then, what can we "confess"? What can "I-darkness" say about "I-darkness"? In this paper, I will clarify the relationship between the act of confession as speech and the view of human beings as darkness in Augustine's thought.
Viviana Félix: Platonismo y reflexión trinitaria en Justino
En este trabajo intentaremos identificar los elementos filosóficos
recogidos por Justino en su reflexión sobre Dios y, de modo particular,
ver si es posible hablar de un paradigma que tomaría de sus
contemporáneos filósofos platónicos, para esbozar una doctrina
trinitaria. Para esto consideraremos algunas de las doctrinas
hipostáticas vigentes en el siglo II de las que podría haberse servido.
Por tratarse de una teología trinitaria incipiente, previa a la
controversia arriana y a las definiciones de Nicea y Constantinopla,
carece de las precisiones terminológicas de los concilios nombrados,
pero tampoco acusa recibo del "trauma arriano", siendo otros sus
interlocutores y, consecuentemente, otras las soluciones que propone,
acordes a ese horizonte de referencia en el que se insertaría su
respuesta.
Habiendo establecido lo anterior, haremos una valoración crítica del uso que Justino hace de esas categorías filosóficas en su teología, tratando de señalar alcance, aportes y límites del mismo.
Habiendo establecido lo anterior, haremos una valoración crítica del uso que Justino hace de esas categorías filosóficas en su teología, tratando de señalar alcance, aportes y límites del mismo.
Johannes Börjesson: Roman Florilegia on the Holy Spirit: Codex Parisinus Graecus 1115, Hadrianum, and the Lost Florilegium of Theodore I
This paper considers Roman florilegia on the Spirit that date from
the very start of the conflict between East and West regarding the
Spirit’s procession. Codex Parisinus graecus 1115 is a copy of a codex
that was created in the papal chancery in 774/5. The patristic
quotations of the extant florilegium on the Spirit within this codex are
of a broad order; while many of them affirm a procession through the Son, some of them speak of a procession from
the Son, while others do not mention the procession at all. Alexander
Alexakis has shown that this is a pro-Latin collection, albeit from a
very early date in the conflict. Alexakis has also shown that there are
textual overlaps between this collection and Adrian I’s Hadrianum (793). In Hadrianum,
Adrian argues explicitly for the procession through the Son, and does
so from a very mixed range of quotations, even using citations that
affirm the procession from the Son. This paper uses these multifaceted
collections to throw light on Pope Theodore’s I now lost florilegium (c.
643), which is attested by Maximus the Confessor in Opusculum
10. The textual links between the three collections are considered, and
their theological character investigated. It is demonstrated that these
florilegia shared similar purposes, which reflect Rome’s position at a
time before it accepted the interpolated creed. It is finally suggested
that the strategy of considering these collections together offers a
more secure route to reconstructing Theodore’s florilegium than
approaches based purely on theological conjecture.
Anna Zhyrkova: Maximus the Confessor’s Attempts at Creating a Logic of Hypostases
This paper examines various conceptual devices that Maximus the
Confessor develops in order to construct an account of individual being.
This account is built mainly for Christological purposes. However, some
of its proposals also grow out of anthropological concerns. Maximus’
approach to the individual does not consist in advancing a consistent
philosophical theory. Rather, he tries to adapt the view of the
individual inherited from Porphyrian logic. This adaptation relies on
him rephrasing Porphyry’s claims in the Patristic language of
hypostasis. As he proceeds to draw conclusions from these rephrased
claims within a broadly Patristic context, a number of conceptual
devices are created, emerging as combinations of elements drawn from
Stoicism, post-Chalcedonian theology, and Porphyrian logic.
Because Maximus views the ideas thus created as binding logical norms of one kind or another, these count as conceptual devices rather than concepts. These are the “mirror law of hypostasis and nature,” according to which things of the same nature do not share their hypostasis and things of the same hypostasis do not share their natures, the analogous inner structure of natures and individuals, which appear to be constructed as, and from, logoi, and the doubled ontological status of logoi, which seem to belong to both the world of linguistic utterances and that of natures. In particular, the paper will seek to analyze just how consistent the latter two devices are with the broad picture Maximus tries to offer.
Because Maximus views the ideas thus created as binding logical norms of one kind or another, these count as conceptual devices rather than concepts. These are the “mirror law of hypostasis and nature,” according to which things of the same nature do not share their hypostasis and things of the same hypostasis do not share their natures, the analogous inner structure of natures and individuals, which appear to be constructed as, and from, logoi, and the doubled ontological status of logoi, which seem to belong to both the world of linguistic utterances and that of natures. In particular, the paper will seek to analyze just how consistent the latter two devices are with the broad picture Maximus tries to offer.
Anna Zhyrkova: Leontius of Jerusalem: Underlying Structures in Individual Entity
This paper has a dual purpose. It aims to show the peculiarity of the
ontology of the individual that Leontius of Jerusalem builds for his
Christological doctrine. Then, on this basis and on the basis of a
philological comparison with the writings of Leontius of Byzantium, it
offers arguments to support a distinction between those two authors.
Leontius of Jerusalem’s conception of the individual is rooted in his attempt to justify orthodox Christological doctrine, opposed by numerous heterodox views. While himself a Neochalcedonian theologian, he was suspicious of embracing Aristotelian and Neoplatonic views in theology without any conceptual analysis and philosophical revision. In particular, he strongly opposed adopting the Porphyrian view of the individual as a collection of properties. He replaced this with his own original conception of the individual and of hypostasis, elucidated through the notion of stasis.
The absence of this conception from the works now attributed to Leontius of Byzantium makes it difficult to identify him with the author of the texts ascribed to Leontius of Jerusalem. Even more may be said about differences in how they write: in respect of word usage, the grammatical constructions employed, and their ways of building sentences. A comparison that takes into account the conclusions of both philosophical and philological analyses will furnish new insights into the issue of the chronological relation between the works those authors are credited with.
Leontius of Jerusalem’s conception of the individual is rooted in his attempt to justify orthodox Christological doctrine, opposed by numerous heterodox views. While himself a Neochalcedonian theologian, he was suspicious of embracing Aristotelian and Neoplatonic views in theology without any conceptual analysis and philosophical revision. In particular, he strongly opposed adopting the Porphyrian view of the individual as a collection of properties. He replaced this with his own original conception of the individual and of hypostasis, elucidated through the notion of stasis.
The absence of this conception from the works now attributed to Leontius of Byzantium makes it difficult to identify him with the author of the texts ascribed to Leontius of Jerusalem. Even more may be said about differences in how they write: in respect of word usage, the grammatical constructions employed, and their ways of building sentences. A comparison that takes into account the conclusions of both philosophical and philological analyses will furnish new insights into the issue of the chronological relation between the works those authors are credited with.
Anna Zhyrkova: From Christ to Human Individual—Shaping the Conception of Individual Existence in Neochalcedonian theology
In debates over the orthodox and adequate expression of the union of
Divine and human natures, many theologians deemed it necessary to
assimilate a great quantity of both philosophical conceptions and
vocabulary. As a consequence, ontological discussions became an inherent
part of theological discourse. Once Philoponus had put forward his
Miaphysite stance as a logically correct conclusion from Cyril’s
Christological statements, it became impossible for theologians to avoid
strictly ontological considerations. The peculiarity of those
discussions was that their main purpose was to explain just one single
metaphysical case: that of Christ.
A “sui generis” case was not of much interest to pagan philosophy. Unique cases were eliminated by subjecting them to general rules. Christ’s uniqueness, however, not only had to be stressed, but also construed in humanly graspable, if imperfect, terms. This turned Christ into a paradigm for ontology, especially in the considerations of late Ancient and early Byzantine theologians. This paper examines the works of Neochalcedonian theologians, from John the Grammarian to Leontius of Byzantium, showing how their focus on Christ made ontology more concerned with particulars than with universals and turned attention from what things are like to the fact that they are. In their writings, the identity of particular beings was recognized and became a problem to explain, alongside the issues of what makes a single entity a unity—in spite of the multiplicity of its constitutive parts—and of what makes a human to be an individual unique being.
A “sui generis” case was not of much interest to pagan philosophy. Unique cases were eliminated by subjecting them to general rules. Christ’s uniqueness, however, not only had to be stressed, but also construed in humanly graspable, if imperfect, terms. This turned Christ into a paradigm for ontology, especially in the considerations of late Ancient and early Byzantine theologians. This paper examines the works of Neochalcedonian theologians, from John the Grammarian to Leontius of Byzantium, showing how their focus on Christ made ontology more concerned with particulars than with universals and turned attention from what things are like to the fact that they are. In their writings, the identity of particular beings was recognized and became a problem to explain, alongside the issues of what makes a single entity a unity—in spite of the multiplicity of its constitutive parts—and of what makes a human to be an individual unique being.
Stephen Lahey: The Divine Ideas in Prague: Philosophical Realism at Charles University at the Beginning of the Fifteenth Century
At the center of arguments between Wyclif supporters and their
opponents was the doctrine of the divine ideas. Upon these arguments
depended the realist ontology of universals ante rem that defined the
Bohemian philosophical theology that would lead to Hussitism. The most
important figure in these debates was Stanislaus of Znojmo, the master
of Jerome, Jakoubek, and Hus. In this paper, I will describe the place
of the doctrine of divine ideas in the philosophical theology Stanislaus
outlines in his two major works, De Vero et Falso and De Universalibus
Maior. I will devote a short portion to describing the historical
background, and to the eventual retraction Stanislaus made, but the
largest section of the paper will be a description of the relation of
Wyclif’s thought to Stanislaus.
Sergey Trostyanskiy: Being, Structure, and Conflicting Sets of Properties in Cyril of Alexandria's Vision of Christ
Cyril's "science of Christ" is located at the very core of the
Christian intellectual tradition, yet we apparently no longer understand
its most basic philosophical premises. This presentation deals with the
metaphysical tenets of Cyril's "science of Christ." It contextualizes
Cyril's thought within the limits of the intellectual horizons of 5th
century Alexandria, locating the basis of his theological speculations
in the commentaries on Plato's Parmenides and focusing particularly on
the creative input of Iamblichus and Syrianus. It then applies the
schema of theological analysis offered by these to Cyril's metaphysics
of the Incarnation, hypothesizing what will follow if we assume that it
underlines his conceptions and functions as a paradigm for his "science
of Christ." It will consequently conclude that Cyril's master agenda can
be thought of as a brilliant synthesis of the exegesis of the
Christological vision of the Fourth Gospel with the terms of the
metaphysics of the Parmenides as mediated via the late Platonist
commentators.
The presentation mainly focuses on Cyril's mereological thought. Special emphasis is given to the conflict of properties in Christ. The application of the correct "term" of understanding in each case is offered as the resolution of an apparent paradox, rescuing the affirmations from self-contradiction through the utility of the notions of pros heauto and pros ta alla. Finally, the presentation aims to show how this approach to the subject matter relates to the diverging patterns of understanding of Cyril's metaphysics: i.e. to the macro-argumentative strategy of ancient and modern interpreters.
The presentation mainly focuses on Cyril's mereological thought. Special emphasis is given to the conflict of properties in Christ. The application of the correct "term" of understanding in each case is offered as the resolution of an apparent paradox, rescuing the affirmations from self-contradiction through the utility of the notions of pros heauto and pros ta alla. Finally, the presentation aims to show how this approach to the subject matter relates to the diverging patterns of understanding of Cyril's metaphysics: i.e. to the macro-argumentative strategy of ancient and modern interpreters.
Susan Griffith: Apostolic authority and the ‘incident at Antioch’: Chrysostom on Galatians 2:11-14
Paul’s confrontation of Peter in Antioch, as related in Galatians
2:11-14, caused much consternation for the exegetes of the early church.
Controversy over how these two foundational apostles could clash
produced multiple divergent theories, and even provided fodder for pagan
critics. Chrysostom’s interpretation of the passage is often
incorrectly lumped with that of other fathers. This paper looks closely
at Chrysostom’s elaborate explanation in his occasional homily on the
pericope (In illud: In faciem ei restiti), and compares this to the exegesis found in his better-known sermon series on Galatians (In epistulam ad Galatas commentarius).
Chrysostom’s interpretations are placed in the context of other
patristic and pagan understandings and deployments of the Pauline text,
as well as the history of the development of concepts of authority in
the early church.
Catherine Kavanagh: Eriugena's Trinity: A framework for interreligious dialogue
The Carolingian philosopher and theologian Johannes Scottus Eriugena
is an important point of confluence of many streams of Trinitarian
thought, as well as a significant and creative theologian in his own
right. Because of his remarkable ability to work back through Patristic
sources to the original Neoplatonic doctrine by means of sheer
ratiocination, Eriugena also acts a valuable critic of the many streams
of Trinitarianism that come through to him, both Eastern and Western.
This issue has been well explored from the perspective of the
Neoplatonic elements that went up to make it. However, a good deal of
new work on the Liberal Arts tradition has appeared recently (including
my own). The integration of this work with existing scholarship on the
Neoplatonic elements in his Trinitarian theology is an important
project, which also has implications for contemporary debates in
theology, especially as regards inculturation. In this communication,
the issue of Eriugena's methodology will be addressed, and the extent to
which that reflects Patristic methodology as a whole, when confronted
with an attractive and sophisticated system of thought.
Josef Loessl: How bad is Augustine's "bad conscience" (conscientia mala)? An enquiry
Augustine's concept of moral conscience follows an earlier Christian
tradition which is based on an exegesis of Romans 2:14-16 and passages
such as 1 Timothy 1:5: con-science as the manifestation of the law of
nature "written into the hearts" of all human beings and enabling each
to know and to do what s/he ought to do (the good) and not to do what
s/he ought not to do (the bad). This "good conscience" (conscientia bona) is manifest in principles such as the Golden Rule or the commandment to love one's neighbour.
In the context of his teaching on Original Sin, however, Augustine transforms this concept of a positive (rational and volitional) faculty into one of a negative (guiltlike) emotion (conscientia mala) that "reminds" people of their inherent sinfulness. In this context he advises people to "use" this emotion to acknowledge their need of forgive-ness and to ask for God's grace, which would restore their good conscience, which in turn would cause them to do good works.
This account of moral conscience raises some questions, such as: Is conscience a rational faculty or an irrational emotion? If the latter, then what is it that provides the conscience with reason and volition? If the answer is "grace", then what is the role of the natural order and the law of nature? And how is for human beings trying to do the good thing and to live the good life related to salvation?
In the context of his teaching on Original Sin, however, Augustine transforms this concept of a positive (rational and volitional) faculty into one of a negative (guiltlike) emotion (conscientia mala) that "reminds" people of their inherent sinfulness. In this context he advises people to "use" this emotion to acknowledge their need of forgive-ness and to ask for God's grace, which would restore their good conscience, which in turn would cause them to do good works.
This account of moral conscience raises some questions, such as: Is conscience a rational faculty or an irrational emotion? If the latter, then what is it that provides the conscience with reason and volition? If the answer is "grace", then what is the role of the natural order and the law of nature? And how is for human beings trying to do the good thing and to live the good life related to salvation?
Marek Jankowiak: Reading between the lines: Diplomacy and Conflict at the Sixth Ecumenical Council (680-1)
The Acts of the Sixth Ecumenical Council—that put an end to the
monothelete controversy in 680-1—have never attracted much attention of
the church historians. Unjustly so, as they offer a surprisingly rich
account of the most dramatic ecumenical council in church history. Below
the carefully edited surface of orderly sessions, one can catch
glimpses of intense diplomatic manoeuvring and of dramatic conflict that
degenerated into a civil war, the dethronement of two emperors, the
execution of several generals, and a momentous defeat with the Bulgars. I
will attempt to show how these events are related to the condemnation
of monotheletism and how the Acts have been redacted to mute conflict
and emphasise consensus and the respect of procedures. On this basis, I
will reflect on the mechanisms of theological diplomacy and unsuccessful
conflict prevention during the monothelete controversy.
Manabu Akiyama: L’esegesi per mezzo dell’Unigenito Dio (Gv 1,18) secondo Clemente Alessandrino
Nel libro quinto di Stromati (Strom. V 81,3-4) Clemente Alssandrino, basandosi sul passo del Vangelo secondo Giovanni (Gv
1,18: “μονογενὴς θεὸς ὁ ὢν εἰς τὸν κόλπον τοῦ πατρὸς ἐκεῖνος
ἐξηγήσατο”), dice che la questione teologica più difficile da trattare è
la dimostrazione del principio primo e più antico. D’altronde Clemente,
quando interpreta tipologicamente un tralcio con un grappolo d’uva
descritto nel libro dei Numeri (Nm 13,23-14,12) per
esempio, basandosi sulla figura di Gesù crocifisso, sviluppa per la
prima volta tra i padri ecclesiastici una spiegazione soteriologica e
sacramentale su questo passo (Paed. II 19,3-4). Il modo
d’interpretazione di Clemente corrisponde alla direzione fuoriuscente
dello Spirito Santo dal fianco di Gesù crocifisso (Gv 19,34), perché il corpo stesso di Gesù sulla croce si unisce al Verbo eterno di Dio (Gv
19,30). Nonostante il passo del quarto Vangelo di cui sopra si traduce
di solito che “l’Unigenito Dio, quegli che è nel seno del Padre, Egli lo
rivelo”, mi sembra invece che Clemente non interpreti la frase “εἰς τὸν
κόλπον” come qualificatrice del sostantivo “ὁ ὤν”, ma del verbo
“ἐξηγήσατο”: cioè, l’Unigenito Dio-Verbo rivela (ἐξηγήσατο) il mistero
del Padre eternamente, mentre noi siamo condotti per mezzo di questo
Unigenito Dio nel seno (εἰς τὸν κόλπον) del Padre infinitamente.
Diveniamo quindi incessantemente l’immagine di Dio (Gn 1,26),
cioè il Verbo di Dio, specialmente unificandoci alla figura di Cristo
sulla croce. Secondo Clemente così, lo gnostico vive sempre nella
comunione trinitaria del Padre, del Figlio-Verbo, e dello Spirito Santo
nel corpo di Cristo crocifisso.
Pauline Allen: Post-mortem polemics: the literary persecution of Severus of Antioch (512-518)
One of the most enduring religious conflicts of the late-antique period
was that occasioned by the Council of Chalcedon (451 CE). The person who
galvanised the anti-Chalcedonian side theologically and politically was
Severus, patriarch of Antioch from 512-518. During his lifetime he
engaged vigorously in debate with his theological rivals, being
eventually exiled in 518 and condemned by imperial edict in 538. The
odium that attached to his person and works continued after his death,
as can be seen, for example, from the numerous references to him and his
works in imperial documents and conciliar acta. However, two sustained post-mortem
attacks on the patriarch of a non-theological nature stand out: a long
letter by the otherwise unknown monk Eustathius from the mid-sixth
century (CPG 6810), and the polemical poem by George of Pisidia (CPG
7836), which dates from between 619 and 634. This paper will investigate
the rhetoric employed by these two authors and their hostile
representation of the pre-eminent opponent of the council of 451 and his
followers, in which negotiation and conflict-resolution did not play a
part and damnatio memoriae was paramount.
Kristian Heal: Construal and Construction of Genesis in early Syriac Sermons
The literary critic Stanley Fish argued that, ‘Interpretation is not
the art of construing but the art of constructing'. Thus meanings are to
be found in (re)constructing texts and not simply in explaining them.
We could argue whether Fish's observation is in fact correct, but I
prefer to take it a prompt to reassess the interpretative value of the
reconstructed narratives which we find in numerous late antique Syriac
sermons on Genesis. We are entirely comfortable in attributing
interpretative value to the commentary, which in essence is construing a
text. My concern in this paper, however, is with the interpretative
process and impact of the construction of a new scriptural story in
Syriac sermons, or what we may call the hermeneutics of invention.
Allan Fitzgerald: Conscience and Jesus Christ
Building on philosophical insights in Manfred Svensson’s work,[1]this
paper examines the relation of Augustine’s appreciation of knowledge/
wisdom to conscience from a theological point of view, thus connecting
the article I wrote on Jesus Christ as the wisdom and knowledge of God
(Col 2:3)[2]to his understanding of conscience.
After discussing Augustine’s contribution to an understanding of conscience, I will use Augustine’s sermons to explore and explain his everyday articulation of conscience to his ordinary listeners and to compare that experience to the way he explains conscience in the works studied by Svensson.
I will pay attention to the relationships Augustine establishes between humility [3] and conscience (1 Tim 1:5: conscientia bona) and hope (doc. chr. 1, 40, 44, etc.) so that it is possible to see how Augustine makes connections between Jesus Christ and the Christian when speaking about conscience.
[1]Manfred Svensson, “Augustine on Moral Conscience,” The Heythrop Journal 54 (2013) 42-54.
[2]Allan Fitzgerald, “Jesus Christ, the knowledge and wisdom of God,” in The Cambridge Companion to Augustine, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, p. 108-122.
[3]Allan Fitzgerald, “Christ’s Humility and Christian Humility in the de civitate Dei,” unpublished paper presented at a conference on the City of God in Bogota, Colombia, August 2014.
After discussing Augustine’s contribution to an understanding of conscience, I will use Augustine’s sermons to explore and explain his everyday articulation of conscience to his ordinary listeners and to compare that experience to the way he explains conscience in the works studied by Svensson.
I will pay attention to the relationships Augustine establishes between humility [3] and conscience (1 Tim 1:5: conscientia bona) and hope (doc. chr. 1, 40, 44, etc.) so that it is possible to see how Augustine makes connections between Jesus Christ and the Christian when speaking about conscience.
[1]Manfred Svensson, “Augustine on Moral Conscience,” The Heythrop Journal 54 (2013) 42-54.
[2]Allan Fitzgerald, “Jesus Christ, the knowledge and wisdom of God,” in The Cambridge Companion to Augustine, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, p. 108-122.
[3]Allan Fitzgerald, “Christ’s Humility and Christian Humility in the de civitate Dei,” unpublished paper presented at a conference on the City of God in Bogota, Colombia, August 2014.
Enrique Eguiarte: Conscientia (...) itineribus (...) in sapientiam
This paper deals with the use of the Term Conscientia in St. Augustine's
Early Writings(391-393), namely in the Third Book of the Libero
Arbitrio, the first 32 Enarrationes in Psalmos and De Sermone Domini in
Monte to trace the development of the idea of Conscientia, and the Shift
from an anthropological concept of Conscientia (conscientia
mortalitatis/itineribus) to a Theological and Moral Dimension
(Conscientia bona/mala), in St. Augustine's first works as a Priest at
Hippo, namely in De Sermone Domini in Monte where the Moral aspects of
Conscientia are underlined.
Manuel Mira: Priesthood in Maximus Confessor
Maximus Confessor speaks about priesthood in some places of his works
Ambigua, Quaestiones ad Thalassium, not to mention other places. His
teachings deal with the common priesthood of the christian, on the
priest as representant of Christ on earth, on the different fruits that
priesthood work produce in the souls of the believers. This paper
analyze these passages, and tries to build a sistematic presentation, in
which the different ideas find their place.
Richard Tomsick: Unholy reminiscences by Christians in Carthage: Tertullian’s Theology of Alienation
In his earliest disciplinary works, aimed at recent converts and
catechumens alike, Tertullian faced the difficult, albeit self-appointed
task of creating a rubric of behavior that virtually prohibited
Christians from engaging in social and cultural activities of Carthage.
In doing so, he announced a new theology of sin based on such
activities, and, consequently on the association and participation by
Christians in such activities. If followed, such proscriptions would
further isolate the Christian community at a time when alienation (and
the identification qua Christian that would follow) was perilous, given recent persecutions.
The fact that Tertullian thought it necessary to create this disciplinary apparatus suggests the widespread ‘misbehavior’ of his audience. I will argue that the new converts, who until recently were adult pagans themselves, did little to modify their behaviors for a variety of reasons.
Questions of his authority aside, I will examine Tertullian’s method of instruction as well as his motivations in defining bright lines for Christian behavior, including his sincere belief in the importance of baptism, and his desire for the salvation of souls. “Unholy Reminiscences” in the title of this short communication is a reference to a line from ad Martyras, when Tertullian reminded Christians in prison awaiting death that they were at last free from the distractions of society and the memory of sinful activities.
The fact that Tertullian thought it necessary to create this disciplinary apparatus suggests the widespread ‘misbehavior’ of his audience. I will argue that the new converts, who until recently were adult pagans themselves, did little to modify their behaviors for a variety of reasons.
Questions of his authority aside, I will examine Tertullian’s method of instruction as well as his motivations in defining bright lines for Christian behavior, including his sincere belief in the importance of baptism, and his desire for the salvation of souls. “Unholy Reminiscences” in the title of this short communication is a reference to a line from ad Martyras, when Tertullian reminded Christians in prison awaiting death that they were at last free from the distractions of society and the memory of sinful activities.
jan van pottelberge: The Letter to Theodore of Clement of Alexandria. A much debated document. How to come to a solution?
After the publication of this Letter with a commentary by Morton
Smith in 1973 the debate on the authenticity and the interpretation
seemed not to come to an end. In 2011 all antagonists except one agreed
to participate to a symposium. The Proceedings were published in 2013.
In a debate at the end of the sumposium Peter Jeffery, one of the
heaviest antagonists did declare: "We do not have a robust discussion
among Clements experts as to how this (Letter) does or does not fit
into the works of Clement." My communication will propose some elements
that point into the authenticity of this document as to the language
used. As a classical philologist and a specialist of Clement I hope to
demonstrate that the Letter is not a hoax.
David Riggs: Cyprian against the Nicaeans: Claiming the Saint for Homoean Christianity in Vandal Carthage
The Vandal period of African Christianity has long existed as a sort
of Dark Ages in which the primary narratives of the Church are flush
with persecution, exile, and destruction. Nevertheless, a notable surge
of interest in the history of the Vandals in recent decades has prompted
revisionist work that has broadened the purview of scholarship well
beyond the paradigm Victor of Vita offers. Amid such work, the Homoean
ecclesial fellowship of the Vandal kingdom has begun to emerge as
something more than a one-dimensional body of heretical barbarian
persecutors. Some recent studies have highlighted how the Homoean Church
sought to establish itself as a genuinely "African" communion that
appealed to a broad cross-section of the population.
Along these lines, this paper proposes that a little-known anonymous sermon, Contra Paganos, offers a first-hand glimpse of Homoean Church leaders leveraging the prestige and authority of Saint Cyprian to establish their ecclesial communion as the rightful heir of the African Christian tradition. After making a case for ascribing this sermon to the Homoean Church at Carthage and highlighting its rhetorical use of Saint Cyprian's authority, this study will situate the anonymous text alongside additional literary and archaeological glimpses of the Homoean Church's effective cultivation of the cult of Saint Cyprian in Vandal Carthage. Accordingly, I shall argue that conventional characterizations of the Vandal period as destructive and disruptive for African Christianity must yield to interpretations that are more attentive to Vandal contributions to the development and prosperity of the African Church.
Along these lines, this paper proposes that a little-known anonymous sermon, Contra Paganos, offers a first-hand glimpse of Homoean Church leaders leveraging the prestige and authority of Saint Cyprian to establish their ecclesial communion as the rightful heir of the African Christian tradition. After making a case for ascribing this sermon to the Homoean Church at Carthage and highlighting its rhetorical use of Saint Cyprian's authority, this study will situate the anonymous text alongside additional literary and archaeological glimpses of the Homoean Church's effective cultivation of the cult of Saint Cyprian in Vandal Carthage. Accordingly, I shall argue that conventional characterizations of the Vandal period as destructive and disruptive for African Christianity must yield to interpretations that are more attentive to Vandal contributions to the development and prosperity of the African Church.
Gavril Andreicut: A Key for Distinguishing Orthodoxy from Heresy
This paper addresses the topic of ‘orthodoxy’ and ‘heresy’ in early
Christianity. This is a complex topic that raises many questions about
the nature and character of early Christianity. It is unfortunate that
the answers in this regard are, for several reasons, inconclusive. While
some speak of an early ‘orthodoxy,’ some see it as a product of later
controversies. And while some see ‘heresy’ as a deviation from
‘orthodoxy,’ others see it as old as ‘orthodoxy.’ Such views are rather
confusing than edifying. My paper will address this delicate topic. Can
we speak of ‘orthodoxy’ before the fourth century? If yes, what is
‘orthodoxy’? Conversely, can we speak of ‘heresy?’ If yes, what is
‘heresy?’ Is heresy as old as ‘orthodoxy?’ How we can distinguish
‘heresy’ from ‘orthodoxy?’ These are important questions. My paper,
although a perspective, tries to bring light on this delicate topic.
While ‘heresy’ is as old—or almost as old— as ‘orthodoxy,” ‘orthodoxy’
can be distinguished from ‘heresy’ as early as we can speak of them. My
paper will distinguish ‘orthodoxy’ from ‘heresy’ in a pertinent and
helpful way, I believe. My perspective is based on some generally held
assumptions, although I contend that in some regards faith and
flexibility are more pertinent and helpful that inflexibility and rigid
theologies. I hope that my paper offers a solid and coherent perspective
on a very delicate and disputed topic.
Matyáš Havrda: The origin and purpose of Stromata VIII: The riddle revisited
The fragmentary text known as the eighth book of the Stromata has
puzzled Clementine scholars for centuries. For the most part, it
consists of purely philosophical material concerned with the theory of
demonstration and the method of scientific inquiry. But it also includes
elements unmistakably Christian. Since the 17th century several
theories have been proposed about its origin and purpose. This paper
will offer a critical overview of these theories, with a special focus
on the Nautin hypothesis published in 1976. The results of the most
recent inquiry, viewing the text as a collection of excerpts from a lost
writing of Galen, will be presented as well.
Wednesday, 6 May 2015
Matteo Caruso: Hagiographic style of Vita Spyridonis between rhetoric and literary tradition: analogies between Joan Chrysostom's homilies and Theodore's, bishop of Paphos, work
The goal of my speech consists in analyzing rhetorical relationships
and influences between the Vita Spyridonis, written by Theodore, bishop
of Paphos, and the homilies of Joan Chrysostom.
The idea of studying this issue came to me observing that the final of Theodore's work is similar to the final used by Joan Chrysostom in many homilies. The same final appears in some homilies of Epiphanius of Salamis of Cyprus also. Then I noticed the Chrysostom's homilies thematic influence on Theodore's work especially appears in narrations of social miracles, that regard debts and credits. Theodore's view of poor people and debtors seems to be influenced by Chrysostom's homilies concerning poor and rich people. The contempt of vanity, gold, rich clothes seems to be in both authors. These mutual characteristics lead me to conclude that Theodore in the middle of 7th century knew Chrysostom's homilies and used them as a stylistic and thematic model to write his work on St Spyridon.
Starting from this relationship, I propose to analyze some homilies of Chrysostom comparing them with the Theodore's work and find others rhetorical characteristics which link the two authors. Finally the purpose of my speech is to underline the grammatical and thematic influence of Chrysostom's works on Vita Spyridonis and consequently on monastic writings and life of Cyprus.
The idea of studying this issue came to me observing that the final of Theodore's work is similar to the final used by Joan Chrysostom in many homilies. The same final appears in some homilies of Epiphanius of Salamis of Cyprus also. Then I noticed the Chrysostom's homilies thematic influence on Theodore's work especially appears in narrations of social miracles, that regard debts and credits. Theodore's view of poor people and debtors seems to be influenced by Chrysostom's homilies concerning poor and rich people. The contempt of vanity, gold, rich clothes seems to be in both authors. These mutual characteristics lead me to conclude that Theodore in the middle of 7th century knew Chrysostom's homilies and used them as a stylistic and thematic model to write his work on St Spyridon.
Starting from this relationship, I propose to analyze some homilies of Chrysostom comparing them with the Theodore's work and find others rhetorical characteristics which link the two authors. Finally the purpose of my speech is to underline the grammatical and thematic influence of Chrysostom's works on Vita Spyridonis and consequently on monastic writings and life of Cyprus.
Thomas Heyne: A Polemicist rather than a Patrologist: Calvin's Attitude to and Use of the Early Church Fathers
Some scholars have argued that John Calvin was a respectful and
insightful student of the Church Fathers, and Calvin himself claimed
that he read and understood the Fathers better than his Roman Catholic
opponents. But a close analysis of Calvin's treatment of several early
Christian writings (including those of Augustine, Chrysostom,
Eusebius-Rufinus, and the Second Council of Nicaea), reveals that he was
more of a polemicist than a patrologist. Calvin appreciated and used
the Fathers' writings predominantly as a means to his disputatious ends.
He cited the Fathers primarily when they supported his interpretation
of Scripture; otherwise, he was willing to ignore them, obscure them,
and even deceitfully distort them. Unlike Desiderius Erasmus and
others, Calvin was no humanistic historian; he showed little desire to
learn from the Fathers and make their teachings widely known.
Karla Pollmann: The Secular Reception of Augustine
A new tendency that has
emerged in the second half of the 20th century and is still on-going is a
form of reception that uses Augustine's rich and diverse body of
thought as a quarry from which to adapt some of his ideas in a new
context, without, however, taking over the metaphysical or theological
dimensions which, of course, form an integral part of Augustine's
thinking throughout. One could speak here tentatively of a
secularisation of Augustine's legacy, that is, an activity of changing
or transforming this legacy (or parts of it), so that it is no longer
under the control or influence of religion or necessarily depends on the
existence of a transcendent world and a (in Augustine's case Christian)
God. Naturally, this is a phenomenon typical of recent decades in the
Western world in general, where it can also be observed as operative in
the spheres of art, education, morality, and society overall. In this
contribution we will concentrate on examples pertaining to the reception
of Augustine that demonstrate this pattern of reception in a world
outside of church and Christianity, comprising political theory,
literature, philosophy, psychotherapy, and semiotics.
Paul Blowers: Modern Recontextualizations of Maximus the Confessor
The renaissance in scholarly study of Maximus the Confessor that
began in the 1940s and 50s (through the work of P. Sherwood, H. Urs von
Balthasar, et al.), coupled with the growing culture of patristic
"retrieval" in contemporary theology East and West, has nurtured a
number of important theological recontextualizations of Maximus.
Stimulated by the "neo-patristic synthesis" pioneered by Georges
Florovsky, Vladimir Lossky, Dimitru Staniloae, and others, contemporary
Orthodox theology has generated several recontextualized profiles of
Maximus: as ecumenical christologian; as theological cosmologist (and
ecologist); as Eucharistic ecclesiologian; etc. In the West, Hans Urs
von Balthasar, who did much to reintroduce Maximus to contemporary Roman
Catholic theology, developed his "theo-dramatic" paradigm of
constructive theology very heavily (I will argue) on a Maximian
foundation. More recently, Jean-Luc Marion's phenomenological interest
in Dionysian apophaticism has had clear ramifications for
reinterpretation of Maximus. Maximus has also become a crucial resource
in contemporary virtue ethics, and in the work ecological theologians
such as Celia Deane-Drummond, Christopher Southgate, and Willis Jenkins.
He has even been engaged in the recent Evangelical retrieval of
patristic sources. My paper will provide a comparative and critical
analysis of this broad array of profiles.
Stephen Cooper: Ambrosiaster in Reformation Zürich: Heinrich Bullinger’s Use of ‘Ambrose’ in his Commentaries on Paul
The first complete set of Latin commentaries on the Pauline epistles
(sans Hebrews), composed by an unknown Roman presbyter and issued
anonymously in multiple recensions under the pontificate of Damasus
(366–382), had the great fortune to be attributed to Ambrose by most of
the manuscript tradition. Included in the first printed editions of
Ambrose’s works, they were read and mined by both Protestant and
Catholic theologians for polemical and pastoral purposes. One reformer
who made extensive use of these commentaries on Paul, was Heinrich
Bullinger, who succeeded Zwingli as Zürich's chief pastor in 1531. By
1537 Bullinger published a complete series of commentaries on Paul,
which extensively quote—and laud—Ambrosiaster’s works on Paul alongside
those of other patristic exegetes as well as humanistic biblical
scholars. One of the major emphases in Ambrosiaster’s commentaries is a
sharp historical focus on Paul’s opponents, the so-called
pseudoapostoli; alongside this is the unknown exegete’s insistence upon
the church having a viable system of penitence able to re-incorporate
erring members. These threads of Ambrosiaster’s Paul-commentaries appear
to have resonated with Bullinger, who devoted great effort toward
achieving a working concord with other Protestant reformers (a
successful effort with Geneva and an ultimately unsuccessful attempt at
dialogue with Lutherans). In this paper I will begin the work of
evaluating the impact of Ambrosiaster’s commentaries on Bullinger
through an analysis of how the latter’s treatment of the pseudoapostles
of Second Corinthians reflects the comments of Ambrosiaster.
D. L. Dusenbury: New Light on Time in Augustine, Confessions XI
I will make a very succinct report on the most important findings presented in my May 2014 monograph, The Space of Time: A Sensualist Interpretation of Time in Augustine, Confessions X to XII (Brill, Leiden), namely:
(α) several textual considerations that undermine a long-prevalent Platonic/ Plotinian interpretation of time as distentio animi in Confessions XI;
(β) several textual indications of strong New Academic/ Ciceronian and Epicurean/ Lucretian influences on A.'s practice of philosophical confessio in Confessions X to XII;
(γ) signs of the hitherto unrecognized importance of Aristoxenus' rhythm-theory, mediated to A. by Cicero (and likely also by Quintilian), for interpreting A.'s concept of time in Confessions XI; and
(δ) the upshot: Augustine's concept of time is not Neo-Platonic - as maintained for well over a century - but instead resembles the "sensualist" time-concept of Epicurus (as mediated to A. by Lucretius and Cicero), and is articulated in terms of the rhetorical rhythm-theory of Cicero (and likely Quintilian) that A. lectured on as a rhetor, and that dates back to Aristoxenus.
I wish to communicate to the conference that A.'s time-concept is not intellectivist, but sensualist. The "dilation" that constitutes time for A. is not a dilation of the mind but of the senses - as A. himself states in the last sentences of his time-investigation (variatur affectus sensusque distenditur, XI.31.41)
(α) several textual considerations that undermine a long-prevalent Platonic/ Plotinian interpretation of time as distentio animi in Confessions XI;
(β) several textual indications of strong New Academic/ Ciceronian and Epicurean/ Lucretian influences on A.'s practice of philosophical confessio in Confessions X to XII;
(γ) signs of the hitherto unrecognized importance of Aristoxenus' rhythm-theory, mediated to A. by Cicero (and likely also by Quintilian), for interpreting A.'s concept of time in Confessions XI; and
(δ) the upshot: Augustine's concept of time is not Neo-Platonic - as maintained for well over a century - but instead resembles the "sensualist" time-concept of Epicurus (as mediated to A. by Lucretius and Cicero), and is articulated in terms of the rhetorical rhythm-theory of Cicero (and likely Quintilian) that A. lectured on as a rhetor, and that dates back to Aristoxenus.
I wish to communicate to the conference that A.'s time-concept is not intellectivist, but sensualist. The "dilation" that constitutes time for A. is not a dilation of the mind but of the senses - as A. himself states in the last sentences of his time-investigation (variatur affectus sensusque distenditur, XI.31.41)
Catharina Bouwman: Mater Sapientia, a Wisdom Theology in the Works of Augustine
In the works of Augustine we find expressions of divine motherhood. He
ascribed expressions of divine motherhood to divine personifications
such as Wisdom, Christ, celestial Jerusalem. These expressions points
to a Wisdom Christology in which Jesus the man is the envoy of Wisdom.
Michael Bakker: Maximos' aporia of Christ's γνώμη, the stages of willing and the νοῦς as king of the soul
Maximos the Confessor presents us with a problem by both affirming
and denying a γνώμη in Christ. A way out of this aporia is offered by
two other elements from his writings: the stages of the willing process
and the image of the soul as city.
I tend to associate the twelve (!) stages with the discursive reason (λόγος), which by cumbersome deliberation tries to decide on the right course of action. In contrast, Christ and the saints decide on a higher level: that of the intellect (νοῦς): “Through the medium of reason, they raised up to the level of intellect their power of sensation (αἴσθησις).” Christ and the saints thus do posses a γνώμη, but it is not shaped gnomically, but noetically.
QThal 49 illustrates the latter way of willing by presenting the νοῦς as king ruling the city of the soul, who has as his chief court officials λόγος, ἐπιθυμία and θυμός.
Applied to the Christ’s agony in Gethsemane this would mean that Christ received from his senses the natural desire not to die. He even formulates it is as an uttered request to the Father. Ascending from the rational level to the noetic level, however, He decides to keep his natural will fully aligned with His divine will. This decision is then passed on below to reason, which says “not as I will, but as You will” and further down to His body directing it to go to His disciples.
I tend to associate the twelve (!) stages with the discursive reason (λόγος), which by cumbersome deliberation tries to decide on the right course of action. In contrast, Christ and the saints decide on a higher level: that of the intellect (νοῦς): “Through the medium of reason, they raised up to the level of intellect their power of sensation (αἴσθησις).” Christ and the saints thus do posses a γνώμη, but it is not shaped gnomically, but noetically.
QThal 49 illustrates the latter way of willing by presenting the νοῦς as king ruling the city of the soul, who has as his chief court officials λόγος, ἐπιθυμία and θυμός.
Applied to the Christ’s agony in Gethsemane this would mean that Christ received from his senses the natural desire not to die. He even formulates it is as an uttered request to the Father. Ascending from the rational level to the noetic level, however, He decides to keep his natural will fully aligned with His divine will. This decision is then passed on below to reason, which says “not as I will, but as You will” and further down to His body directing it to go to His disciples.
Jimmy Chan: The Restoration Word Group in De Civitate Dei, Books XI-XXII: A Study of an Important Backbone of Augustine's Theology of History
This project is a lexical-contextual-theological study of the second
part of De civitate Dei, Books XI to XXII, focusing on how a
‘restoration' word group (comprising the ‘restore' lemma in Latin)
develops through the text. It is show that this word group serves as an
important backbone for Augustine's theology of history, by providing it
with semantic support and relating with its various key elements. The
occurrences of all the Latin lemma carrying the ‘restore' nuance in the
text are identified (by using professional software of Augustinian
studies and through effective communication with affiliated Augustinian
scholars). Then, for each of the three main divisions within De civitate
Dei, namely, Books XI to XIV, Books XV to XVIII and Books XVIX to XXII,
key passages comprising the ‘restore' lemma are studied, in terms of
how they play the lexical function within the given context of the text.
The restoration word group is shown to provide a fresh reading of De
civitate Dei and open up a new perspective of studying Augustine's
theology of history which is so prominent in the work. Specifically,
four restoration dimensions, namely, the restoration of the body and
soul, the restoration of the predestined number of saints, the
restoration of the virtues and morals, the restoration of faith and hope
of the saints on earth, are identified. These restoration dimensions
effectively expresses and connects the key elements of Augustine's
theology of history, namely, universality out of divine providence,
biblicality, Christocentrality and directionality (or linearity).
Elizabeth Clark: Augustine and American Professors in the Nineteenth and Early Twentieth Centuries: From Adulation to Critique
The reception of Augustine by American seminary professors saw some
dramatic shifts between the early nineteenth to the early twentieth
centuries. From a strong endorsement of Augustine’s theories of
original sin, predestination, and damnation of the unbaptized by
Princeton Theological professor Samuel Miller in the early and
mid-nineteenth century, confidence in these doctrines eroded.
Subsequent professors at Union Theological Seminary (Henry Boynton
Smith; Philip Schaff; Arthur Cushman McGiffert) and Harvard Divinity
School (George LaPiana) attacked Augustine’s sanctioning the use of
coercion against the Donatists, his neglect of public and social ethics,
his downplaying the role of the human will in the Pelagian controversy,
and his high ecclesiology that had led to unfortunate tactics on the
part of nineteenth- and early twentieth-century popes. By 1917,
McGiffert at Union Seminary could respond to an inquirer that there was
perhaps one professor in America who still believed in Augustine’s
theory of predestination: Benjamin B. Warfield at Princeton. The
sharper critique of Augustine was supported by newer views of God’s
benevolence, human nature, and individual liberty.
Joan Hart-Hasler: Bede’s Use of Textual Criticism in his Exegesis: The Retractatio in Actus Apostolorum
Late in life, following the lead of St Augustine, Bede wrote his
second commentary on Acts, calling it the ‘Retraction’. Bede’s Retractatio in Actus Apostolorum
is a work of exegesis, but not of the kind one usually encounters in a
medieval interpretation of a biblical book. In its preface, Bede,
alluding to his earlier commentary, says “I will now write on the same
volume [Acts] a little book of reconsideration, desiring
especially to add to what had been less well said or to correct what
seems to have been improperly said. I have also taken care to note
certain things in the Greek which have been set down differently, or
with more or fewer words.” The Retractatio’s avowed intention is
to correct errors in the biblical text and misunderstandings of its
meaning that Bede had discovered while working with various texts of
Bibles, both Latin and Greek. Bede’s work, however, is not a list of errata
but a commentary, endeavoring to uncover through the specific
differences of words the genuine and full meaning of the early
experience of the Apostles.
My paper will illustrate how Bede utilizes the variations in
different biblical texts, both Latin and Greek, to develop an exegesis
of Acts that relies on a form of internal textual criticism for its
understanding of the text it interprets.
Francine Cardman: Augustine Preaching Charity and Poverty: The Beatitudes
This paper examines an emerging shift in Augustine’s preaching of the
work of charity, as it relates to poverty and almsgiving, in his
commentary on The Lord’s Sermon on the Mount in 394 and a group of sermones ad populum
from around 410-416. It compares his commentary on the Beatitudes in
Book 1, which he characterizes as being about mercy, with sermons from
the 410s, particularly sermons 53 and 53/A, explicitly on the
Beatitudes, and related sermons, including four on the Lord’s prayer
(56-59) and several others on isolated verses. In analyzing in these
works, I give primary attention to the examples and motivations
Augustine appeals to in explicating Mt 5:7 (the merciful), 5:1 (the
poor in spirit), and 5:8 (those who hunger and thirst for
justice/righteousness). When Augustine steps aside from his critique of
the Donatists’ false charity and good works, on the one hand, and the
formality of his structural analysis of the beatitudes and the seven
gifts of the Holy Spirit, on the other, he opens a space for considering
more material works of mercy in loving one’s neighbor. I argue that,
in conjunction with his use of related Matthaean texts, we can see in
these sermons from around 410 to 416 the beginnings of a larger shift in
Augustine’s preaching of mercy that will become prominent in the last
decade of his life.
Julia Beier: Sin as a Structural Principle of Alcimus Ecdicius Avitus' De spiritalis historiae gestis
Bishop Avitus of Vienne is one of the great authors of the biblical
epic genre in Late Antiquity. His epos De spiritalis historiae gestis
consists of five books. Until now, there are only unsufficient models in
the science regarding the coherence between these, because most of the
papers and researches are only based on philological items without
focussing on the conception of the complete work and its theology. This
being one of the reasons why this epos is often poorly evaluated.
However, the connection between the books is provided by the alternation
of 'sin stories' and 'order stories'. Thus, my working assumption is
that in a very paradoxical way the elimination of order by the sin is
the structural principle of the epos. In my contribution I would like to
show that the epos is a poem about the good and the bad, probably in
the tradition of Augustine. Therefore, just like the church father, the
epic poem illustrates that the good cannot exist without the bad and,
even further, that the malum has a regulatory effect within the
cosmology.
Volker Henning Drecoll: Augustine's Letter 184A
Augustine’s letter ep. 184A, transmitted only in one manuscript, is an
important witness to the complexe situation of Augustine in 417/418. The
paper aims to show how Augustine uses anti-Pelagian and anti-pagan
strategies in order to convince the (otherwise unknown) addressees of
his own theology. For the anti-Pelagian topics a set of standard
arguments is introduced that was developed in the years 416/417 in the
Anti-Pelagian controversy and can be compared with sermons and other
letters. Against the pagans, the letter refers to the first eleven books
of De civitate dei. The paper will raise the question how these two
fields fit each other. In preparation of a philological and historical
commentary the methodological problems of such a commentary will be
discussed.
Peter Toth: The Questions of Pseudo-Justin: New Manuscripts, New Texts and a New Author?
The collection of some 150 chapters, originally entitled as Answers to the Orthodox faithful (QRO)
and attributed to Justin the Martyr, is one of the earliest Christian
representatives of the Late Antique genre of
question-and-answer literature. The importance of the work stands in
that it is the first known example of a new patristic type of
erotapokriseis which constitute an encyclopedic collection of all
available secular and religious knowledge of the time.
The paper presents a survey of my latest research on the manuscript tradition of the work, resulting in the discovery of two new witnesses. These manuscripts, one from the early tenth and another from the thirteenth century, contain not only some portions of the QRO, but also two hitherto unknown and unedited series of questions and answers that seem to represent new items of the Pseudo-Justinian corpus.
In the second part of my paper I will present a closer study of these new texts, a collection of cosmological erotapokriseis and a series of Christological aporiae. A deeper analysis of the philosophical terminology of the first text with its explicit quotations from Aristotle and Julian's Contra Galilaeos, sheds new light on the philosophical background of Pseudo-Justin. While the further examination of the Christology and textual transmission of the second work, which also seems to be connected to the QRO, may help us to shed new light on the date and identity the mysterious author hiding behind the name of Justin the Martyr and Philosopher.
The paper presents a survey of my latest research on the manuscript tradition of the work, resulting in the discovery of two new witnesses. These manuscripts, one from the early tenth and another from the thirteenth century, contain not only some portions of the QRO, but also two hitherto unknown and unedited series of questions and answers that seem to represent new items of the Pseudo-Justinian corpus.
In the second part of my paper I will present a closer study of these new texts, a collection of cosmological erotapokriseis and a series of Christological aporiae. A deeper analysis of the philosophical terminology of the first text with its explicit quotations from Aristotle and Julian's Contra Galilaeos, sheds new light on the philosophical background of Pseudo-Justin. While the further examination of the Christology and textual transmission of the second work, which also seems to be connected to the QRO, may help us to shed new light on the date and identity the mysterious author hiding behind the name of Justin the Martyr and Philosopher.
Marius A. van Willigen: Why did Augustine change his perspective on baptism?
The sacrament of Holy Baptism was an initiation rite for every new
Christian in early Christianity. Many baptisteries were built as
invaluable testimonies of this initiation-rite at the end of the fourth
century. At the same time however, this initiation-rite was seriously
threatened by a devastating lack of interest for baptism in general.
Many Christians listened to the exposition of the Bible, without wishing
to be baptized. Receiving the initiation-rite of baptism seemed to
thoroughly change in this period. Baptism was retarded until death. To
receive baptism appeared to be equal to getting a passport to heaven.
Christians decided en masse to be baptized just prior to death.
It was the Church Father Augustine who had considered this a dangerous turn of events. He did not forbid the practice of adult-baptism, but simultaneously encouraged infant baptism.
What was his motivation for this? Was he afraid of depriving Christians of their privilege to choose for adult-baptism, or did he stimulate parents to baptize their children deliberately? What was his theological reflection on this subject and what was his motivation to change practice of baptism?The paper will explain Augustine's motivation to promote infant baptism along with Ambrose' and Origen's reflections on infant baptism. The continual theological reflection on baptism in relation to original sin will be mapped out, starting with Origen and ending with Augustine.
It was the Church Father Augustine who had considered this a dangerous turn of events. He did not forbid the practice of adult-baptism, but simultaneously encouraged infant baptism.
What was his motivation for this? Was he afraid of depriving Christians of their privilege to choose for adult-baptism, or did he stimulate parents to baptize their children deliberately? What was his theological reflection on this subject and what was his motivation to change practice of baptism?The paper will explain Augustine's motivation to promote infant baptism along with Ambrose' and Origen's reflections on infant baptism. The continual theological reflection on baptism in relation to original sin will be mapped out, starting with Origen and ending with Augustine.
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