닛사의 그레고리의 'Catechetical Oration'에 대해 - 논문
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닛사의 그레고리의 'Catechetical Oration'에 대해 - 논문

개혁신학어벤져스 2023. 4. 6. 21:56

 닛사의 그레고리의 'Catechetical Oration'에 관한 논문입니다.

 Catechetical Oration 내부가 아니라 밖(특히, 유노미우스에 관한 저작)에서 그것을 분석해야 할 필요성을 제기 및 논의합니다. 이는 삼위일체론에 대한 논쟁이 휩쓰는 시대임을 고려할 때, 아주 적절합니다. 앞으로도 그의 저작의 희소함을 기억하며, 다각도로 그의 글들을 그의 저작들을 통해 분석해야 할 겁니다.^^


 * Gregory on Gregory: Catechetical Oration 38, Andrew raDDe-gallwitz, University of Notre Dame, Notre Dame, USA

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STUDIA PATRISTICA  
VOL. XCV  
Papers presented at the Seventeenth International Conference  
on Patristic Studies held  
in Oxford 2015  
Edited by  
MARKUS VINZENT  
Volume 21:  
The Fourth Century  
Cappadocian Writers  
PEETERS  
LEUVEN – PARIS – BRISTOL, CT  
2017  
Table of Contents  
THE FOURTH CENTURY  
Elizabeth DePalma Digeser  
Pseudo-Justin’s Cohortatio ad Graecos and the Great Persecution...  
3
Atsuko Gotoh  
The ‘Conversion’ of Constantine the Great: His Religious Legislation  
in the Theodosian Code ...................................................................... 13  
Vladimir latinovic  
Arius Conservativus? The Question of Arius’ Theological Belonging 27  
Sébastien Morlet  
Eusèbe le grammairien. Note sur les Questions évangéliques (À Mari-  
nos, 2) et une scholie sur Pindare....................................................... 43  
Thomas O’Loughlin  
Some Hermeneutical Assumptions Latent within the Gospel Appa-  
ratus of Eusebius of Caesarea ............................................................. 51  
Michael Bland simmons  
Exegesis and Hermeneutics in Eusebius of Caesarea’s Theophany  
(Book IV): The Contemporary Fulfillment of Jesus’ Prophecies...... 65  
Sophie Cartwright  
Should we Grieve and Be Afraid? Christ’s Passions versus the Pas-  
sions of the Soul in Athanasius of Alexandria................................... 77  
William G. rusch  
Athanasius of Alexandria and ‘Sola Scriptura’.................................. 87  
Lois M. Farag  
Organon in Athanasius’ De incarnatione: A Case of Textual Inter-  
polation ................................................................................................ 93  
Donna R. hawk-reinharD  
The Role of the Holy Spirit in Cyril of Jerusalem’s Sacramental  
Theology.............................................................................................. 107  
Olga Lorgeoux  
Choice and Will in the Catecheses of Cyril of Jerusalem ................. 119  
VI  
Table of Contents  
Florian Zacher  
Marius Victorinus, Opus ad Candidum. An Analysis of its Rhetorical  
Structure .............................................................................................. 127  
CAPPADOCIAN WRITERS  
Claudio moreschini  
Is it Possible to Speak of ‘Cappadocian Theology’ as a System?...... 139  
Nienke M. Vos  
‘Teach us to pray: Self-Understanding in Macrina’s Final Prayer.... 165  
Adam Rasmussen  
Defending Moses. Understanding Basil’s Apparent Rejection of Alle-  
gory in the Hexaemeron...................................................................... 175  
Marco Quircio  
A Philological Note to Basil of Caesarea’s Second Homily on the  
Hexaemeron......................................................................................... 183  
Mattia C. Chiriatti  
ἀγών/θέα-θέαμα and στάδιον/θέατρον: A Reviewed ἔκφρασις of the  
Spectacle in Basil’s In Gordium martyrem......................................... 189  
Arnaud Perrot  
Une source littéraire de l’Ep. 46 de Basile de Césarée : le traité De  
la véritable intégrité dans la virginité................................................ 201  
Aude Busine  
Basil of Caesarea and the Praise of the City...................................... 209  
Benoît gain  
Le voyage de Basile de Césarée en Orient : hypothèses sur le silence  
des sources externes............................................................................ 217  
Seumas MacDonalD  
Contested Ground: Basil’s Use of Scripture in Against Eunomius 2 225  
Nikolai liPatov-chicherin  
An Unpublished Funerary Speech (CPG 2936) and the Question of  
Succession to St. Basil the Great ........................................................ 237  
Kimberly F. Baker  
Basil and Augustine: Preaching on Care for the Poor....................... 251  
Table of Contents  
VII  
Oliver Langworthy  
Sojourning and the Sojourner in Gregory of Nazianzus.................... 261  
Alexander D. Perkins  
The Grave Politics of Gregory Nazianzen’s Eulogy for Gorgonia..... 269  
Gabrielle Thomas  
Divine, Yet Vulnerable: The Paradoxical Existence of Gregory Nazian-  
zen’s Imago Dei................................................................................... 281  
Bradley K. Storin  
Reconsidering Gregory of Nazianzus’ Letter Collection ................... 291  
Andrew raDDe-gallwitz  
Gregory on Gregory: Catechetical Oration 38 .................................. 303  
Andrew J. summerson  
Gregory Nazianzus’ Mixture Language in Maximus the Confessor’s  
Ambigua: What the Confessor Learned from the Theologian........... 315  
Ryan Clevenger  
Ἔκφρασις and Epistemology in Gregory of Nazianzus..................... 321  
Karen CarDucci  
Implicit Stipulations in the Testamentum of Gregory of Nazianzos  
vis-à-vis the Testamenta of Remigius of Rheims, Caesarius of Arles,  
and Aurelianus of Ravenna................................................................. 331  
Michael J. Petrin  
Eunomius and Gregory of Nyssa on τὸ τῆς εὐσεβείας μυστήριον .... 343  
Andra Jugănaru  
The Function of Miracles in Gregory of Nyssa’s Hagiographical  
Works................................................................................................... 355  
Makrina Finlay  
Gregory of Nyssa’s Framework for the Resurrected Life in The Life  
of St. Macrina...................................................................................... 367  
Marta Przyszychowska  
Three States after Death according to Gregory of Nyssa.................. 377  
Ann conway-Jones  
An Ambiguous Type: The Figure of Aaron Interpreted by Gregory  
of Nyssa and Ephrem the Syrian ........................................................ 389  
VIII  
Table of Contents  
Robin orton  
The Place of the Eucharist in Gregory of Nyssa’s Soteriology.......... 399  
Anne karahan  
Cyclic Shapes and Divine Activity. A Cappadocian Inquiry into  
Byzantine Aesthetics........................................................................... 405  
Hilary Anne-Marie Mooney  
Eschatological Themes in the Writings of Gregory of Nyssa and John  
Scottus Eriugena.................................................................................. 421  
Benjamin Ekman  
‘Natural Contemplation’ in Evagrius Ponticus’ Scholia on Proverbs 431  
Margaret Guise  
The Golden and Saving Chain and its (De)construction: Soterio-  
logical Conversations between Jacques Derrida, Jean-Luc Marion  
and the Cappadocian Fathers.............................................................. 441  
Gregory on Gregory: Catechetical Oration 38  
Andrew raDDe-gallwitz, University of Notre Dame, Notre Dame, USA  
aBstract  
In Catechetical Oration 38, Gregory of Nyssa refers to other works he has written on  
the disputed topics of Christian faith. Most of the scholarly discussion of the passage  
has focused on whether the passage can be used to date the Catechetical Oration.  
I propose to read it instead for what it says about Gregory’s self-understanding as a  
writer of dogmatic texts. Gregory’s way of describing himself here matches what he says  
about other authors in various places in his corpus. Gregory emerges as a self-conscious  
literary stylist, emphasizing his own rigor and contentious polemical engagement with  
adversaries to the proper understanding of the baptismal creed.  
Gregory of Nyssa can be an elusive author. He published nothing like Augus-  
tine’s Retractationes; his autobiographical references are highly selective;  
compared to Basil or Gregory of Nazianzus, his corpus of letters is slender;  
as far as we know, upon his death, no panegyrist took Gregory’s virtue and  
erudition for his theme, as he and Nazianzen had done for Basil; moreover, the  
fifth-century historians give no attention to the details of his life. As a result,  
two important scholarly questions – knowing when he wrote his surviving  
writings and what he thought of them – have proven difficult to answer. When  
it comes specifically to the various works we have by Gregory on disputed  
Trinitarian and Christological issues, certain facts can be established, especially  
surrounding the composition of the three books Against Eunomius and the  
Refutation of Eunomius’ “Confession. But the context for many other works  
remains murky.1  
1
In addition to important passages in other works, the works that are principally devoted to  
Trinitarian and Christological topics are: To Eustathius On the Holy Trinity, To the Greeks based  
on Common Notions, To Ablabius On Not Thinking We Say “Three Gods, To Simplicius On the  
Faith, On the Holy Spirit Against the Macedonians, To Theophilus Against the Apollinarians,  
Antirrheticus Against Apollinarius, Homily On the Day of Lights, Homily on the Holy Pascha,  
Homily on the Three Day Interval, Homily on the Holy and Saving Pascha, Homily on the Holy  
Resurrection of the Lord, Homily on the Ascension of Christ, On the Deity Against Evagrius,  
Against Eunomius 1-3, Refutation of Eunomius’ “Confession, Letters3, 4, 5, 24 (with important  
passages in other letters), Homily on the Deity of the Son and the Holy Spirit, Homily on Pentecost,  
On the passage: Then the Son too … (1Cor. 15:28), and the Catechetical Oration.  
Studia Patristica XCV, 303-314.  
© Peeters Publishers, 2017.  
304  
a. raDDe-gallwitz  
With respect to the anti-Eunomian works, we fortunately have some com-  
mentary from Gregory himself. Matthieu Cassin’s important recent study has  
urged scholars to take account of three letters as crucial ‘paratexte’ for reading  
Against Eunomius.2 Gregory’s prefatory letter to Peter and Peter’s reply, as  
well as a letter to disciples of an unnamed sophist (perhaps Libanius) with  
which Gregory sent the first book to the great orator, tell us a great deal about  
how he understood the work and the kind of elite, educated readership he hoped  
to cultivate for it. In this article, I argue that one chapter of Gregory’s Cate-  
chetical Oration is best read similarly as a ‘paratexte’ for reading Gregory’s  
controversial writings on Christian doctrine generally.  
The crucial details for Gregory’s self-characterization come in the first three  
sentences of Catechetical Oration 38:  
In what we have said [i.e. up to this point in Catechetical Oration], I think we have not  
overlooked any of the questions about the mystery except the discourse about the faith,  
which we will set forth briefly in the present treatise. For those who are looking for the  
fuller discourse, we have already set it forth in other works, rigorously unfolding the  
discourse with all possible seriousness. In those works, we both engaged with our  
adversaries in a controversial manner and investigated for ourselves the questions posed  
to us. But in the present discourse, we have deemed it suitable to say only as much  
about the faith as is encompassed by the Gospel’s statement that the one who is born  
in the spiritual rebirth knows from whom he is born and what kind of living creature  
comes into being. For only this kind of birth has it in its power that one becomes what-  
ever one chooses.3  
Let us first briefly set the passage’s context within the Catechetical Oration.  
This is chapter 38 of 40. The preceding chapters deal, as Gregory says here,  
with ‘questions about the mystery’. The work aims at providing a guide for  
‘those who preside over the mystery’ in their task as catechists.4 Gregory likens  
catechesis to ‘therapy’: just as a physician adapts the healing to the disease, so  
2
Matthieu Cassin, LÉcriture de la controverse chez Gregoire de Nysse: Polémique littéraire  
et exégèse dans le Contre Eunome, Collection des Études Augustiniennes, Série Antiquité 193  
(Paris, 2012), 111-33.  
3
Or. Catech. 38, Raymond Winling (ed.), Grégoire de Nysse: Discours Catéchétique, Sources  
Chrétiennes (SC) 453 (Paris, 2000), 324; Ekkehard Mühlenberg (ed.), Opera minora dogmatica,  
Part IV: Oratio Catechetica, Gregorii Nysseni Opera (GNO) 3.4 (Leiden, 1996), 98: Οὐδὲν οἶμαι  
τοῖς εἰρημένοις ἐνδεῖν τῶν περὶ τὸ μυστήριον ζητουμένων πλὴν τοῦ κατὰ τὴν πίστιν λόγου,  
ὃν διὁλίγου μὲν καὶ ἐπὶ τῆς παρούσης ἐκθησόμεθα πραγματείας, τοῖς δὲ τὸν τελεώτερον  
ἐπιζητοῦσι λόγον ἤδη προεξεθέμεθα ἐν ἑτέροις πόνοις, διὰ τῆς δυνατῆς ἡμῖν σπουδῆς ἐν  
ἀκριβείᾳ τὸν λόγον ἁπλώσαντες, ἐν οἷς πρός τε τοὺς ἐναντίους ἀγωνιστικῶς συνεπλάκημεν  
καὶ καθἑαυτοὺς περὶ τῶν προσφερομένων ἡμῖν ζητημάτων ἐπεσκεψάμεθα. Τῷ δὲ παρόντι  
λόγῳ τοσοῦτον εἰπεῖν περὶ τῆς πίστεως καλῶς ἔχειν ᾠήθημεν ὅσον ἡ τοῦ εὐαγγελίου περιέχει  
φωνή, τὸ τὸν γεννώμενον κατὰ τὴν πνευματικὴν ἀναγέννησιν εἰδέναι παρὰ τίνος γεννᾶται  
καὶ ποῖον γίνεται ζῷον· μόνον γὰρ τοῦτο τὸ τῆς γεννήσεως εἶδος κατἐξουσίαν ἔχει ὅτιπερ  
ἂν ἕληται τοῦτο γενέσθαι.  
4
Or. catech. Prologue (SC 453, 136; GNO 3.4, 5).  
Gregory on Gregory: Catechetical Oration 38  
305  
too must catechists start from catechumens’ existing beliefs, showing that what  
is best in their own belief system implies Christian belief or at least is conso-  
nant with it.5 On this basis, he seeks first to show that both Greek and Jewish  
belief already includes or implies not simply exclusive belief in a single God,  
but also a ‘distinction of hypostases’.6 Then he turns to the creation and fall of  
humanity and the economy of salvation, addressing Greek objections to the  
incarnation. Throughout this section, his method is to show how Greek intuitions  
about God, morality, death, and so on find their logical terminus in the Christian  
doctrine of incarnation. He then turns to Eucharist and baptism immediately  
before our passage.  
In chapter 38, Gregory refers to a ‘discourse about the faith’ that appears in  
compressed form within Catechetical Oration. ‘The faith’ names the profession  
one makes at baptism. The treatment of the faith appears in chapter 39, where  
Gregory seeks to show that only properly Trinitarian faith – that is, belief in  
the Father together with the uncreated Son and Spirit – secures the ‘birth from  
above’ promised in Christian baptism. The rather brief treatment of the topic  
in chapter 39 in some ways echoes arguments made elsewhere in his corpus.  
He alludes to Matth. 28:19, a key verse that Gregory treats throughout his  
Trinitarian writings as Jesus’ own creed. He provides a brief exegesis coordi-  
nating biblical passages in which the predicate of ‘giving life’ is applied to all  
three hypostases in scripture. Clearly, from his opening remarks in chapter 38  
and his arguments in chapter 39, Gregory means for his readers to look for  
parallel works, even if in chapter 39 he compresses the ‘discourse about the  
faith’ and tailors it to match the Catechetical Oration’s ‘therapeutic’ purpose.  
‘Other works’  
Difficulties arise, however, with this project of correlating the Catechetical  
Oration with the unnamed ‘other works’. The basic problem is that Gregory’s  
hints are insufficient to determine precisely which works he has in mind. It is  
commonly assumed that Gregory must be referring to Against Eunomius. This  
association is very likely, especially given parallels between his description  
here and in Cassin’s para-texts. However, it has not been universally accepted.  
In particular, Raymond Winling, the editor of the Catechetical Oration for  
Sources Chrétiennes, posited on thematic grounds that the Catechetical Oration  
must have been written by a younger Gregory, someone more enamored of the  
powers of reasoning for unlocking divine mysteries than the seasoned anti-  
Eunomian polemicist would allow.7 While Winling’s reasoning relies on an  
5
Or. catech. Prologue (SC 453, 138; GNO 3.4, 5).  
Or. catech. 1 (SC 453, 144; GNO 3.4, 8).  
SC 453, 125-30.  
6
7
306  
a. raDDe-gallwitz  
unconvincing portrait of Gregory’s intellectual development, his doubts serve  
as a reminder that Gregory is not explicit about identifying the ‘other works’,  
and so we must approach the question carefully.  
Based solely on what he says in chapter 38 and the arguments he develops  
in chapter 39, Gregory could be referring to any of the following: Letter 5,  
Letter 24, To Eustathius On the Holy Trinity, On the Holy Spirit Against the  
Macedonians, To Ablabius, To Simplicius On the Faith, Against Eunomius 1-3,  
The Refutation of Eunomius’ “Confession, On the Deity of the Son and the  
Holy Spirit, To Peter, To the Greeks, and possibly even the Antirrheticus against  
Apollinarius. Moreover the scope of the words ‘other works’ is vague: he could  
be referring to all of these works, to some of them, or to none of them (if he is  
referring to otherwise unknown works). Perhaps there are ways of eliminating  
some of these titles as candidates. Joseph Barbel proposed a connection between  
chapter 38 and Letter 5, and on thematic grounds this is correct.8 However,  
Gregory’s claim that his treatment in the ‘other works’ is lengthy seems incom-  
patible with Letter 5, which is an intentionally brief creedal statement. The  
remaining works just listed are longer than Letter 5 (though Letter 24 and To  
Simplicius are also relatively brief). Perhaps some others can be eliminated on  
thematic grounds. Given the Trinitarian and baptismal focus of these chapters  
in the Catechetical Oration, the Antirrheticus against Apollinariusdoes not  
seem to be in view here. But we are still left with several works. Some scholars  
have posited a distinction within Gregory’s corpus between works such as To  
Eustathius with private addressees and those like Against Eunomius intended  
for a public audience; in line with this distinction, when Gregory sends his  
readers to available works he could only be referring to the open works.9 Along  
this line of interpretation, the three books Against Eunomius and the imperially-  
commissioned Refutation of Eunomius’ “Confession” seem most likely to be  
the ‘other works’ (not to mention the fact that they are lengthy works that  
engage opponents, as Gregory says here). The circumstances in which Gregory  
produced Against Eunomius 1 in particular suggest a wide audience: he first  
read it to a group of luminaries including Gregory of Nazianzus and Jerome  
and sent part of it to students of rhetoric and separately as a whole to his own  
brother Peter who would become bishop of Sebasteia.10 We should not, how-  
ever, rule out a wide circulation of the so-called Opera dogmatica minora, even  
for works with individual addressees such as To Eustathius and To Ablabius.  
Such private publication was common in antiquity and did not imply an author’s  
8
Gregor von Nyssa, Die grosse katechetische Rede (Oratio catechetica magna,)eingeleitet,  
übersetzt, und kommentiert von Joseph Barbel, Bibliothek der Griechischen Literatur, Band 1  
(Stuttgart, 1971), 209 n. 343.  
9
See the criticism of this approach in Reinhard Jakob Kees, Die Lehre von derOikonomia  
Gottes in derOratio Catechetica Gregors von Nyssa, VCS 30 (Leiden, 1995), 202.  
10  
Jerome, De viris illustribus128.  
Gregory on Gregory: Catechetical Oration 38  
307  
intention to limit a work’s circulation.11 Both formally and thematically, those  
privately-addressed works match Gregory’s description here. In sum, we cannot  
rule out the possibility that Gregory had those shorter works in mind in addition  
to the anti-Eunomian works or perhaps even instead of the anti-Eunomian  
works.  
There is a further ambiguity in the sentence about the ‘other works’. When  
Gregory says that in those works, he both engaged with adversaries and inves-  
tigated problems for himself, he could be read in two ways. In the first way,  
he is saying that the other works come in two sets: in some of them, he engaged  
polemically with adversaries, while in others he investigated topics proposed  
for him.12 If such a distinction between controversial and non-controversial  
works is meant, one could assign Against Eunomius to the first set and works  
like To Ablabius, To Peter (assuming it was written by Gregory), and To the  
Greeks to the latter set. According to the other way of reading the sentence, he  
is referring to works in which he both engaged adversaries and examined  
proposed topics independently.13 One could argue that Gregory maintains  
such a double focus in many of the works just listed. Perhaps the ambiguity  
is unresolvable, and in any event, it is not necessary to resolve it here.  
The question of which works Gregory has in mind is logically distinct from  
two other questions: (1) what does Catechetical Oration 38 tell us about the  
work’s date or at least its place within a relative chronology of Gregory’s  
works? (2) What does this chapter tell us about the nature of those works – that  
is, what sort of commentary does Gregory offer on his own writings? Answer-  
ing the chronological question requires definitively identifying the other works,  
whereas answering the other question about Gregory’s self-conception does  
not. Unfortunately, the scholarly discussion on this passage has focused exclu-  
sively on the question of chronology.14 I hope that my argument thus far has  
cast doubt on whether the chronological usage of the chapter is a helpful  
approach. If the identification of the ‘other works’ is uncertain, and if some of  
the potential candidates are themselves impossible to date with certainty, then  
any chronological claim based solely on this passage must be based on partial  
evidence or circular thinking or both. All we can say is that Gregory was a  
seasoned writer of available doctrinal works when he wrote this chapter; while  
this very likely points to a time after he wrote Against Eunomius, we cannot  
rule out the idea that he has other works in mind also. Besides the reference in  
11  
For an overview, see Harry Gamble, Books and Readers in the Early Church: A History of  
Early Christian Texts (New Haven, 1997), 82-143, with the literature cited there.  
12  
Johannes Zachhuber apparently endorses this reading: Human Nature in Gregory of Nyssa:  
Philosophical Background and Theological Significance (Leiden, 2000), 206.  
13  
Reinhard Jakob Kees supports this interpretation: Die Lehre (1995), 202.  
Note, e.g. Winling’s note on chapter 38: ‘Passage-clé pour la question de la datation’  
14  
(SC 453, 324 n. 1). He does not comment on the chapter’s contents. See the literature he cites  
on pages 125-30.  
308  
a. raDDe-gallwitz  
chapter 38, there are additional, weighty considerations when it comes to the  
question of dating the Catechetical Oration, which are not in focus in this  
study, though I note that all of them point to the conventional dating in the  
mid-to-late 380’s, that is, after Against Eunomius.15 But chapter 38 by itself  
does not clinch the argument. The problem, however, with focusing on chro-  
nology is not simply the circular or conjectural nature of the arguments, but  
more importantly that the chronological approach has suppressed an attentive  
reading of the passage’s language itself in light of Gregory’s use of similar  
language elsewhere.  
There are three phrases here that have almost a technical sense in Gregory’s  
corpus; in the following, we will use parallel occurrences across Gregory’s  
corpus to flesh out the sense of these key terms in Gregory’s self-portrait.  
‘The discourse about the faith’  
In chapter 38, Gregory distinguishes between ‘the questions about the mys-  
tery’ and ‘the discourse about the faith’. The two are distinct, though related:  
the discourse about the faith is one part of the questions about the mystery.  
‘Mystery’ appears 24 times in the Catechetical Oration; in chapter 38, it refers  
specifically to baptism. ‘The faith’, as used in chapters 38 and 39, means the  
profession of faith at baptism, especially as embodied in Jesus’ words in Matth.  
28:19.16 As for the logos (discourse, speech, account, teaching) that addresses  
this creed, Gregory refers to it in the singular, though he notes that it appears  
in multiple works (ἐν ἑτέροις πόνοις) as well as in the present treatise (ἐπὶ  
τῆς παρούσης πραγματείας). The logos therefore is not to be identified  
with any treatise or work. Gregory portrays himself as adapting the same logos  
to various occasions or purposes in his various works. The self-same speech  
can be expanded, as in the other works mentioned here, or compressed, as in  
Catechetical Oration 39.  
To get at what this logos is, we can first ask how it relates to the pistis?  
In our paragraph, the two terms are connected with prepositional phrases – first  
kata with accusative, then peri with genitive. If we look at similar phrases  
throughout Gregory’s works, we see that typically the terms are bonded via a  
simple genitive, as in the phrase ὁ τῆς πίστεως λόγος. For instance, Gregory’s  
On the Holy Spirit Against the Macedonians begins with these sentences:  
When it comes to those whose words are empty, it is perhaps best not to give any  
answer at all. Solomon’s wise instruction seems to lead in this direction, when he bids  
15  
See the full, though somewhat inconclusive, discussion in R. Kees, Die Lehre (1995), 200-7.  
Barbel was correct on this point: Gregor von Nyssa, Die grosse katechetische Rede (Oratio  
16  
catechetica magna), eingeleitet, übersetzt, und kommentiert von J. Barbel, Bibliothek der Grie-  
chischen Literatur, Band 1 (1971), 209 n. 343.  
Gregory on Gregory: Catechetical Oration 38  
309  
us ‘not to answer a fool according to his folly’ [Prov. 26:4]. But there is a danger that,  
through our silence, falsehood will overpower the truth and when this rotting gangrene  
of heresy has spread itself widely against the truth, it will completely wreck the healthy  
teaching of the faith (τὸν ὑγιαίνοντα τῆς πίστεως λόγον).17  
Gregory does not specify exactly what the logos is; it could be a creed-like  
summary or his own broader discourse about doctrinal matters. After detailing  
the Pneumatomachian charges against his doctrine, Gregory pivots to his  
defense with a rhetorical question that is common in his works: ‘What, then,  
is our logos?’18 Presumably what follows contains ‘the healthy teaching of the  
faith’, though it is unclear whether this logos is restricted to the short summary  
of Trinitarian principles that immediately follows the rhetorical question or is  
Gregory’s label for the entire account.  
Similar ambiguity appears in other works. In To Eustathius On the Holy  
Trinity, Gregory first offers a narrative of accusations against him; he then  
pivots to his own counter-speech with this: ‘What then is our logos? When the  
Lord handed over the saving faith to those being trained in the logos, he con-  
nected the Holy Spirit with the Father and the Son’.19 Note that logos occurs  
twice here. The first instance names Gregory’s own reply to the accusations  
leveled against him. As in On the Holy Spirit Against the Macedonian,sthe  
logos could refer to the initial summary statement of his case or it could refer  
to the entire discourse that follows. The second occurrence of logos in the  
quoted passage, however, refers to Jesus’ own teaching to his disciples. Jesus’  
logos is identical with the contents of Matth. 28:19; it is ‘the saving faith’.  
Gregory argues that the connective particle between the names in this formula  
signifies a real connection linking the hypostases. That argument – an interpre-  
tation of the risen Lord’s own logos – is Gregory’s logos.  
In To Ablabius, Gregory says: ‘But if our logos is shown to be not quite up  
to the task, we shall forever guard the tradition which we received from the  
fathers firm and unmoved, and ask of the Lord for the logos that is the faith’s  
advocate (τὸν δὲ συνήγορον τῆς πίστεως λόγον)’.20 Once again there are two  
logoi: from the context, the first refers to the entire argument of the work as a  
response to the dilemma Ablabius has proposed, namely that if one confesses  
the divinity of the Son and Spirit along with the Father, one thereby proclaims  
three gods, whereas if one denies their divinity, one commits impiety. Gregory’s  
response to the dilemma represents his best effort at a difficult problem.21 Even  
17  
Spir., Fridericus Mueller (ed.), Gregorii Nysseni Opera Dogmatica Minora, Pars I, GNO 3.1  
(Leiden, 1958), 89.  
18  
Spir. (GNO 3.1, 90).  
Trin. (GNO 3.1, 7).  
19  
20  
Tres dii (GNO 3.1, 39).  
Tres dii (GNO 3.1, 38): Ἔστι δὲ μικρὸς οὗτος ὁ λόγος ὃν ἡμῖν οὐδὲ τοιοῦτος ὡς ὀλίγην  
21  
φέρειν ζημίαν ... Ὁ μέν οὖν λόγος, καθὰ προέφην, πολὺ τὸ δυσμεταχείριστον ἔχει...  
310  
a. raDDe-gallwitz  
if this account fails, he says that he will maintain the baptismal tradition.  
In such a scenario, he envisions a second logos, one that would successfully  
defend this baptismal faith. This logos would be a divine gift.22  
Examples of similar expressions in Gregory’s works could be multiplied.  
In the homily In diem luminum, Gregory makes a brief Trinitarian digression,  
before recalling himself to the festal topic with this remark: ‘Now that’s enough  
on [such] examples. For our current goal is not to restore the logos of the faith,  
so let us return to the present occasion and the topic set before us...’23 Here it  
seems to mean the correct ‘teaching’ of the faith. Gregory tags the restoration  
of this logos as a potential subject of writings, even if it is not the subject of that  
particular homily. Similar expressions appear in Against Eunomius.24 In sum,  
then, while the pairing of logos with pistis is relatively common across Gregory’s  
doctrinal writings, the logos in question, however, alternates between the bap-  
tismal profession itself and the argument offered in its defense. Accordingly,  
it can be something of Gregory’s own composition or something he has inher-  
ited. Despite the ambiguity, we have uncovered a commonplace in his self-  
characterization.  
‘Rigorously’  
Returning to Catechetical Oration 38, Gregory says that his other works  
contain the same logos as does the following chapter, although in those works  
the speech is given a lengthier unfolding. It is not only that those ‘other works’  
are longer, however, but that in them the discourse is unfolded ἐν ἀκριβείᾳ.  
The exact phrase used here appears only one other time in Gregory’s corpus.  
In the 7th Homily on the Song of Songs, in the midst of a complicated analogy,  
Gregory says that a function of the eyes is ‘to discern ἐν ἀκριβείᾳ the lily from  
the thorn and to prefer the one that is saving while rejecting the one that causes  
harm’.25 The idea of knowing discrimination is crucial for the sense of ἐν  
ἀκριβείᾳ here, as it is for the equivalent expression διἀκριβείας, a phrase  
which occurs 91 times in Gregory’s works. Take the following example from  
Gregory’s work On the Dead. It is the beginning of a scripted speech in which  
22  
For a comparable account of someone being inspired (in this case by the Holy Spirit) to  
make rational arguments, see Gregory, On the Life of Macrina, Virginia Woods Callahan (ed.),  
Vita S. Macrinae, in Werner Jaeger, Johannes P. Cavarnos and Virginia Woods Callahan (eds),  
Gregorii Nysseni Opera Ascetica, GNO 8.1 (Leiden, 1952), 390-1.  
23  
In diem luminum, Gunterus Heil (ed.), De Mortuius, in id. et al. (eds), Sermones, Pars 1  
GNO 9 (Leiden, New York, and Köln, 1992), 230.  
24  
Eun. 1.499, 648.  
25  
Hom. 7 in Cant., Hermannus Langerbeck (ed.), Gregorii Nysseni In Canticum Canticorum,  
GNO 6 (Leiden, 1986), 241.  
Gregory on Gregory: Catechetical Oration 38  
311  
‘our mind’ addresses humanity and calls us to self-knowledge. Mind bids  
humanity to remember Paul:  
O human being – everyone who partakes of the nature, ‘attend to yourself and know  
yourself!’ in keeping with Moses’ commandment, and recognize what precisely (ἀκρι-  
βῶς) who you are, distinguishing in your reasoning what you truly are and what is  
[merely] observed in connection with you ... Learn from blessed Paul who examined  
the nature rigorously (παρὰ τοῦ μεγάλου Παύλου τοῦ διἀκριβείας ἐπεσκεμμένου  
τὴν φύσιν), who says that there is one human being external to ourselves and another  
internal.26  
Paul’s examination was done διἀκριβείας, which means that it drew the  
appropriate distinction. Gregory applies the same verb to Paul’s rigorous inves-  
tigation that he uses for his own investigative works in Catechetical Oration 38.  
Note Gregory’s citation of unnamed experts in the Antirrheticus against Apol-  
linarius: ‘Those who rigorously (διἀκριβείας) distinguish realities say that  
opposite names retreat from being present with one another – for example, life  
with death, and conversely, death with life’. The combination of linguistic  
expertise and the drawing of distinctions marks their work as being done δι’  
ἀκριβείας. Referring to linguistic experts in Against Eunomius 2, Gregory says  
he has learned ‘from those who use the expression [namely, ἀγάλλειν, to glorify]  
correctly and who are thoroughly trained in the usage of words (διἀκριβείας  
τῶν ὀνομάτων τὴν χρῆσιν πεπαιδευμένων)...’27 The same phrase is used for  
28  
medical experts in On the Making of Humanit.y The phrase διἀκριβείας  
often has the added sense of describing or examining something ‘in detail’ or  
‘one by one’ as opposed to in an overview or in a summary fashion, including  
in its earlier appearances in the Catechetical Oration.29 So, when Gregory  
describes his own works as being done ἐν ἀκριβείᾳ, he is portraying them as  
containing precise, detailed distinctions of the kind drawn by an expert. The  
notion that Gregory’s doctrinal works contained such distinctions should not  
surprise us; recall the striking claim in To the Greeksthat the distinction of  
ousia and hypostasis accords with ‘the strict canon of logical science’ – that is,  
an expert’s viewpoint – rather than with ordinary (mis)usage.30  
26  
Mort. (GNO 9, 40; cf. p. 34).  
Eun. 2.156; cf. Ref. 110.  
Hom. Opif. (PG 44, 157).  
Among many examples, see titt. Ps., Jacobus McDonough and Paulus Alexander (eds),  
27  
28  
29  
Gregorii Nysseni In Inscriptiones Psalmorum, In Sextum Psalmum, In Ecclesiasticen Homil,iae  
GNO 5 (Leiden, 1986), 80, 111, 115, 121, and 132; trid. spat. (GNO 9, 283); hom. in Eccl.  
(GNO 5, 279, 294, 317); Eun. 1.54; 3.7.28. Cf. or. catech. 6, 32.  
30  
Comm. Not. (GNO 3.1, 32): εἰ δὲ κοινὴ χρῆσις ἀπορεῖ τούτου καὶ κατακέχρηται τοῖς  
τῆς οὐσίας ὀνόμασι εἰς προσώπου δήλωσιν, οὐδὲν πρὸς τὸν ἀκριβῆ κανόνα τῆς λογικῆς  
ἐπιστήμης. In the next sentence, he notes that even οἱ ἐπιστημονικοὶ τῶν λόγων occasionally  
use catachrestic expressions. See also τῷ πρὸς ἡμῶν ... ἐπιστημονικωτάτῳ λόγῳ... (GNO 3.1,  
33).  
312  
a. raDDe-gallwitz  
‘In a controversial manner’  
Gregory says that in the ‘other works’ he not only examined topics on his  
own but also engaged his opponents ἀγωνιστικῶς.31 Such agonistic language  
is prominent also in the three letters cited by Cassin as ‘paratexte’ for Against  
Eunomius.32 As noted above, it could be that he is referring to two distinct sets  
of works: one controversial, the other investigative. If that is the case, then the  
study of ἀγωνιστικῶς in this section applies only to the controversial works.  
Our aim here is to determine how Gregory elsewhere uses this concept as a  
characterization of a certain kind of writing. Fortunately, Gregory describes  
other authors and himself with similar language elsewhere.  
For instance, note this passage from In illud: Tunc et ipse filius:  
What, then, is our account? Perhaps one might be able to perceive the thought better  
through the context of what is written in this part [that is, in 1Cor. 15:28]. For since  
[Paul] included a contentious argument with the Corinthians (ἀγωνιστικὸν πρὸς τοὺς  
Κορινθίους ἐνεστήσατο λόγον), who accepted faith in the Lord but considered the  
dogma about the resurrection of humans to be a fable, saying, ‘how are the dead raised  
up and with what sort of body do they come [1Cor. 15:35]…?’33  
For Gregory, Paul’s argument is ἀγωνιστικόν in that it juxtaposes an inter-  
locutor’s objection with his own persuasive counter-arguments. Gregory is so  
enamored of the practice that he expands Paul’s imagined objection with words  
taken from his own On the Making of Humanity.34  
Note too how Gregory describes Basil’s Hexaemeron in his Apologia in  
Hexaemeron. According to Gregory, Basil wrote Moses’ doctrines in a fully-  
developed (διηπλωμένον) form.35 Incidentally, this root verb is the same one  
Gregory uses in Catechetical Oration to denote his own expansion in the ‘other  
works’ of the logos on the faith. In Basil’s defense, Gregory claims that when  
Basil delivered his homilies on the six days, ‘he did not insert a contentious  
argument’.36 This omission was due to Basil’s unprofessional audience and his  
31  
For the martial origins of Gregory’s language, see Demosthenes’ Third Philippic (Oration IX).51,  
where the orator recommends Athenian defenses be placed far away from the city to prevent close  
engagement with the enemy (συμπλακέντας διαγωνίζεσθαι). Demosthenes I: Orations I-XVII, XX,  
ed. J.H. Vince, Loeb Classical Library 238 (Cambridge, MA and London, 1930), 252.  
32  
M. Cassin, LÉcriture de la controverse (2012).  
In illud: tunc et ipse filius, J. Kenneth Downing, In illud, in id. et al.(eds), Gregorii  
33  
Nysseni Opera Dogmatica Minora, Pars I,IGNO 3.2 (Leiden, New York, Copenhagen, and Köln,  
1987), 10; cf. anim. et res., Andreas Spira (ed.), Gregorii Nysseni De Anima et Resurrectione.  
Opera Dogmatica Minora, Pars II,IGNO 3.3 (Leiden and Boston, 2014), 116-9.  
34  
Hom. Opif. (PG 44, 224D).  
Apologia in hex., Hubertus R. Drobner (ed.), Gregorii Nysseni In Hexaemeron. Opera  
35  
Exegetica in Genesim, Pars ,IGNO 4.1 (Leiden, 2009), 7.  
36  
Apologia in hex. (GNO 4.1, 10): οὐ γὰρ ἀγωνιστικώτερον ἐνεστήσατο λόγον πρὸς τὰς  
τῶν ζητημάτων ἐνστάσεις ἐκθύμως διαπλεκλόμενος… Note the use of a plekō verb for engage-  
ment with adversarial objections.  
Gregory on Gregory: Catechetical Oration 38  
313  
work’s skopos.37 ‘It was an account of the simpler exposition of the words, with  
the aim of setting forth an account that is useful to an uneducated audience’38  
– though Basil also mixed in various teachings from secular philosophy for  
easier comprehension and enjoyment. Gregory complains that his brother’s  
critics have ignored his skopos. Gregory differentiates himself methodologi-  
cally. He states that his Apologia in Hexaemeronis meant for readers, not  
hearers.39 He also says that unlike Basil he has ‘engaged with objections set  
before us’40 – the same verb he uses in Catechetical Oration 38.  
Toward the outset of the work On Infants Who Have Died Prematurel,y  
Gregory distinguishes the method he will avoid in this work from that which  
he will employ: ‘I maintain, moreover, that it is not right to become entangled  
right away confronting objections in a manner that it is rhetorical and combat-  
ive (ῥητορικῶς τε καὶ ἀγωνιστικῶς εὐθὺς κατὰ στόμα πρὸς τὰς ἀντιθέσεις  
συμπλέκεσθαι). Rather, having first established a certain order for the treatise,  
one should in a logical sequence carry out the examination of the topic’.41  
By contrast, in Against Eunomius 2, in the context of an extended metaphor  
likening the works against Eunomius to David’s battle against Goliath, Gregory  
says that ‘we have arranged the treatise against our enemies expertly and con-  
tentiously’ (ἐμπείρως καὶ ἀγωνιστικῶς).42  
When Gregory says that he engaged ἀγωνιστικῶς, the sense is not simply  
that the works are polemical. He means also that he (like Paul) included a  
representation in oratio recta of the opponent’s viewpoint – the familiar ‘he  
says’ or ‘they say’ statements. The adversary’s objections appear in the work.  
Such appearances can occur either through direct citation or through scripted  
speech – what modern scholarship has labelled the ‘diatribe’.43 In Catechetical  
Oration 38, Gregory cites such representations of verbal conflict as a charac-  
teristic feature of his doctrinal works – or at least of one set of them.44  
37  
See Apologia in hex.(GNO 4.1, 10).  
Apologia in hex (GNO 4.1, 10): … ἀλλὰ τῆς ἁπλουστέρας τῶν ῥημάτων ἐξηγήσεως ὁ  
38  
λόγος ἦν, ὥστε πρόσφορον τῇ ἁπλότητι τῶν ἀκουόντων παραθέσθαι τὸν λόγον…  
39  
Apologia in hex. (GNO 4.1, 13): … τὰ δὲ ἡμέτερα ὡς ἐν γυμνασίᾳ τινὶ στοχαστικῶς  
ἐπιχειρούμενα τοῖς ἐντυγχάνουσι προκείσθω…  
40  
Apologia in hex. (GNO 4.1, 14): τὸ μὲν οὖν συμπλέκεσθαι πρὸς τὰς ἐνστάσεις ἡμῖν  
προτεινομένας…  
41  
infant., Hadwiga Hörner (ed.), De infantibus praemature abreptis in GNO 3.2, 76.  
Eun. 2.9 (GNO 1, 229).  
On the history of this scholarship, see Stanley K. Stowers, The Diatribe and Paul’s Letter  
42  
43  
to the Romans, SBL Dissertation Series 57 (Chico, CA, 1991), chapter 1.  
44  
Since Gregory includes a compressed version of that speech in Catechetical Oration with-  
out the opponents’ voice, it would seem that a qualification is needed. Speaking agōnistikōs was  
necessary in the case of extended works, but not in the case of brief accounts. This distinction  
helps to account for little works like epp. 5 and 24, which include the creedal statements and  
proofs that we expect in the discourse about the faith, but lack the opponents’ direct voice.  
314  
a. raDDe-gallwitz  
Naturally, this feature most closely matches Against Eunomius, the Refuta-  
tion of Eunomius’s “Confession, and the Antirrheticus Against Apollinarius:  
works in which Gregory cites texts by the opponent in order to refute them.  
Yet, his claims about Paul and about his own Apologia in Hexaemeron suggest  
that the representation of the opponent’s voice need not derive from any written  
text. One could more broadly view the description of agonistic engagement as  
applying to works like To Eustathius On the Holy Trinityand On the Holy  
Spirit against the Macedonians, where adversaries’ objections are fleshed out  
in Gregory’s own language. The description of the ‘other works’ as agonistic  
is therefore less helpful as an identification of which works he has in mind and  
more useful as a claim about how he understood his project of writing.  
Conclusions  
Three conclusions can be drawn. First, while our paragraph from Catecheti-  
cal Oration offers no definitive evidence on the chronology of Gregory’s  
works, it contains many elements of Gregory’s self-conception as a writer, a  
point which can be seen by viewing it in the light of Gregory’s corpus gener-  
ally. What we see is that he uses similar language to describe himself as he  
uses for describing other authors. Second, if his characterization here accurately  
describes his working method, then when Gregory wrote his doctrinal works,  
he did so according to a twofold pattern characterized by both representation  
of an opponent and precise investigation into a proposed topic. Third, in our  
paragraph we see a sense of Gregory’s own expertise – a claim that his work  
as an author is in some sense in line with that of experts in the learned arts and  
with the paradigmatic biblical authors such as Paul. The works Gregory refers  
to in Catechetical Oration 38 are defined as a set by their topic: they contain  
‘the discourse about the faith’. But when Gregory summarizes them, he ges-  
tures not to their theological contents, but to their literary form. Accordingly,  
the study of Gregory’s doctrinal works should be attentive to the literary fea-  
tures he outlines here as well as their theological argumentation. In Cassin’s  
study of Ep. 15, he notes that for Gregory, even the doctrinal parts of Against  
Eunomius are envisioned ‘sous l’angle littéraire’.45 The point applies equally  
well to Gregory’s self-characterization in Catechetical Oration 38.  
45  
M. Cassin, LÉcriture de la controverse (2012), 122.  
Volume 1  
STUDIA PATRISTICA LXXV  
STUDIA PATRISTICA  
Markus vinzent  
Editing Studia Patristica.....................................................................  
3
Frances Young  
Studia Patristica.................................................................................. 11  
Mark EDwarDs  
The Use and Abuse of Patristics......................................................... 15  
PLATONISM AND THE FATHERS  
Christian H. Bull  
An Origenistic Reading of Plato in Nag Hammadi Codex VI........... 31  
Mark Huggins  
Comparing the Ethical Concerns of Plato and John Chrysostom...... 41  
Alexey Fokin  
Act of Vision as an Analogy of the Proceeding of the Intellect from  
the One in Plotinus and of the Son and the Holy Spirit from the  
Father in Marius Victorinus and St. Augustine.................................. 55  
Laela Zwollo  
Aflame in Love: St. Augustine’s Doctrine of amor and Plotinus’  
Notion of eros ..................................................................................... 69  
Lenka KarFÍkovÁ  
Augustine on Recollection between Plato and Plotinus..................... 81  
Matthias SmalBrugge  
Augustine and Deification. A Neoplatonic Way of Thinking............ 103  
Douglas A. SheParDson  
The Analogical Methodology of Plato’s Republic and Augustine’s  
De trinitate .......................................................................................... 109  
2
Table of Contents  
MAXIMUS CONFESSOR  
Paul A. Brazinski  
Maximus the Confessor and Constans II: A Punishment Fit for an  
Unruly Monk ....................................................................................... 119  
Ian M. GerDon  
The Evagrian Roots of Maximus the Confessor’s Liber asceticus.... 129  
Jonathan Greig  
Proclus’ Doctrine of Participation in Maximus the Confessor’s Cen-  
turies of Theology 1.48-50 .................................................................. 137  
Emma Brown Dewhurst  
The ‘Divisions of Nature’ in Maximus’ Ambiguum 41? ................... 149  
Michael Bakker  
Gethsemane Revisited: Maximos’ Aporia of Christ’s γνώμη and a  
‘Monarchic Psychology’ of Deciding................................................. 155  
Christopher A. Beeley  
Natural and Gnomic Willing in Maximus Confessor’s Disputation  
with Pyrrhus ........................................................................................ 167  
Jonathan Taylor  
A Three-Nativities Christology? Maximus on the Logos.................. 181  
Eric LoPez  
Plagued by a Thousand Passions – Maximus the Confessor’s Vision  
of Love in Light of Nationalism, Ethnocentrism, and Religious Per-  
secution................................................................................................ 189  
Manuel mira  
The Priesthood in Maximus the Confessor......................................... 201  
Adam G. CooPer  
When Action Gives Way to Passion: The Paradoxical Structure of  
the Human Person according to Maximus the Confessor .................. 213  
Jonathan Bieler  
Body and Soul Immovably Related: Considering an Aspect of Maxi-  
mus the Confessor’s Concept of Analogy.......................................... 223  
Table of Contents  
3
Luke steven  
Deification and the Workings of the Body: The Logic of ‘Proportion’  
in Maximus the Confessor .................................................................. 237  
Paul M. Blowers  
Recontextualizations of Maximus the Confessor in Modern Christian  
Theology.............................................................................................. 251  
Volume 2  
STUDIA PATRISTICA LXXVI  
EL PLATONISMO EN LOS PADRES DE LA IGLESIA  
(ed. Rubén Pereto Rivas)  
Rubén PeretÓ rivas  
Introducción.........................................................................................  
1
3
Viviana Laura FÉlix  
Platonismo y reflexión trinitaria en Justino........................................  
Juan Carlos alBy  
El trasfondo platónico del concepto de Lex divina en Ireneo de  
Lyon..................................................................................................... 23  
Patricia ciner  
La Herencia Espiritual: la doctrina de la preexistencia en Platón y  
Orígenes............................................................................................... 37  
Pedro Daniel FernÁnDez  
Raíces platónicas del modelo pedagógico de Orígenes...................... 49  
Rubén PeretÓ rivas  
La eutonía en la dinámica psicológica de Evagrio Póntico ............... 59  
Santiago Hernán vazQuez  
El ensalmo curativo de Platón y la potencialidad terapeútica de la  
palabra en Evagrio Póntico ................................................................. 67  
Oscar velÁsQuez  
Las Confesiones en la perspectiva de la Caverna de Platón .............. 79  
4
Table of Contents  
Gerald cresta  
Acerca de la belleza metafísica en Pseudo-Dionisio y Buenaven-  
tura....................................................................................................... 91  
Graciela L. ritacco  
La perennidad del legado patrístico: Tiempo y eternidad.................. 103  
Volume 3  
STUDIA PATRISTICA LXXVII  
BECOMING CHRISTIAN IN THE LATE ANTIQUE WEST  
(3rd-6th CENTURIES)  
(ed. Ariane Bodin, Camille Gerzaguet and Matthieu Pignot)  
Ariane BoDin, Camille Gerzaguet & Matthieu Pignot  
Introduction .........................................................................................  
1
Matthieu Pignot  
The Catechumenate in Anonymous Sermons from the Late Antique  
West..................................................................................................... 11  
Camille Gerzaguet  
Preaching to the ecclesia in Northern Italy: The Eastertide Sermons  
of Zeno of Verona and Gaudentius of Brescia................................... 33  
Adrian BrÄnDli  
Imagined Kinship: Perpetua and the Paternity of God ...................... 45  
Jarred Mercer  
Vox infantis, vox Dei: The Spirituality of Children and Becoming  
Christian in Late Antiquity ................................................................. 59  
Rafał Toczko  
The Shipwrecks and Philosophers: The Rhetoric of Aristocratic  
Conversion in the Late 4th and Early 5th Centuries ............................ 75  
Ariane BoDin  
Identifying the Signs of Christianness in Late Antique Italy and  
Africa................................................................................................... 91  
Table of Contents  
5
Hervé Huntzinger  
Becoming Christian, Becoming Roman: Conversion to Christianity  
and Ethnic Identification Process in Late Antiquity .......................... 103  
Volume 4  
STUDIA PATRISTICA LXXVIII  
L
ITERATURE, RHETORIC, AND EXEGESE IN SYRIAC VERSE  
(ed. Jeffrey Wickes and Kristian S. Heal)  
Jeffrey Wickes  
Introduction .........................................................................................  
1
5
Sidney H. GriFFith  
The Poetics of Scriptural Reasoning: Syriac Mêmrê at Work...........  
Kristian S. Heal  
Construal and Construction of Genesis in Early Syriac Sermons...... 25  
Carl GriFFin  
Vessel of Wrath: Judas Iscariot in Cyrillona and Early Syriac Tradi-  
tion....................................................................................................... 33  
Susan ashBrook harvey  
The Poet’s Prayer: Invocational Prayers in the Mêmrê of Jacob of  
Sarug.................................................................................................... 51  
Andrew J. Hayes  
The Manuscripts and Themes of Jacob of Serugh’s Mêmrâ ‘On the  
Adultery of the Congregation............................................................ 61  
Robert A. Kitchen  
Three Young Men Redux: The Fiery Furnace in Jacob of Sarug and  
Narsai................................................................................................... 73  
Erin Galgay Walsh  
Holy Boldness: Narsai and Jacob of Serugh Preaching the Canaanite  
Woman................................................................................................. 85  
Scott Fitzgerald Johnson  
Biblical Historiography in Verse Exegesis: Jacob of Sarug on Elijah  
and Elisha ............................................................................................ 99  
6
Table of Contents  
Volume 5  
STUDIA PATRISTICA LXXIX  
CLEMENT OF ALEXANDRIA  
(ed. Piotr Ashwin-Siejkowski)  
Piotr ashwin-sieJkowski  
Introduction .........................................................................................  
1
7
Judith L. Kovacs  
‘In order that we might follow him in all things’: Interpretation of  
Gospel Texts in Excerpts from Theodotus 66-86 ...............................  
Veronika ČernuŠkovÁ  
The Eclogae Propheticae on the Value of Suffering: A Copyist’s  
Excerpts or Clement’s Preparatory Notes? ........................................ 29  
Piotr ashwin-sieJkowski  
Excerpta ex Theodoto – A Search for the Theological Matrix. An  
Examination of the Document in the Light of Some Coptic Treatises  
from the Nag Hammadi Library ......................................................... 55  
Jana PlÁtovÁ  
How Many Fragments of the Hypotyposes by Clement of Alexandria  
Do We Actually Have?....................................................................... 71  
Davide Dainese  
Cassiodorus’ Adumbrationes: Do They Belong to Clement’s Hypo-  
typoseis?.............................................................................................. 87  
Joshua A. NoBle  
Almsgiving or Training? Clement of Alexandria’s Answer to Quis  
dives salvetur? .................................................................................... 101  
Peter WiDDicomBe  
Slave, Son, Friend, and Father in the Writings of Clement of Alexan-  
dria....................................................................................................... 109  
H. cliFton warD  
We Hold These ἀρχαί To Be Self-Evident: Clement, ἐνάργεια, and  
the Search for Truth ............................................................................ 123  
Annette BourlanD huizenga  
Clement’s Use of Female Role Models as a Pedagogical Strategy... 133  
Table of Contents  
7
Brice rogers  
‘Trampling on the Garment of Shame’: Clement of Alexandria’s Use  
of the Gospel of the Egyptians in Anti-Gnostic Polemic................... 145  
Manabu akiyama  
LUnigenito Dio come «esegeta» (Gv. 1:18) secondo Clemente  
Alessandrino........................................................................................ 153  
Lisa raDakovich holsBerg  
Of Gods and Men (and Music) in Clement of Alexandria’s Protrep-  
ticus...................................................................................................... 161  
Joona Salminen  
Clement of Alexandria on Laughter ................................................... 171  
Antoine Paris  
La composition des Stromates comme subversion de la logique aris-  
totélicienne........................................................................................... 181  
Volume 6  
STUDIA PATRISTICA LXXX  
THE CLASSICAL OR CHRISTIAN LACTANTIUS  
(ed. Oliver Nicholson)  
Oliver Nicholson  
Introduction .........................................................................................  
1
John Mcguckin  
The Problem of Lactantius the Theologian ........................................ 17  
Mattias Gassman  
Et Deus et Homo: The Soteriology of Lactantius.............................. 35  
Gábor KenDeFFy  
More than a Cicero Christianus. Remarks on Lactantius’ Dualistic  
System ................................................................................................. 43  
Stefan FreunD  
When Romans Become Christians... The ‘Romanisation’ of Christian  
Doctrine in Lactantius’ Divine Institutes............................................ 63  
8
Table of Contents  
Blandine Colot  
Lactantius and the Philosophy of Cicero: ‘Romideologie’ and Legit-  
imization of Christianity ..................................................................... 79  
Jackson Bryce  
Lactantius’ Poetry and Poetics............................................................ 97  
Oliver Nicholson  
The Christian Sallust: Lactantius on God, Man and History............. 119  
Elizabeth DePalma Digeser  
Persecution and the Art of Reading: Lactantius, Porphyry and the  
Rules for Reading Sacred Texts.......................................................... 139  
David RutherForD  
The Manuscripts of Lactantius and His Early Renaissance Readers. 155  
Carmen M. Palomo Pinel  
The Survival of the Classical Idea of Justice in Lactantius’ Work ... 173  
Ralph Keen  
Gilbert Burnet and Lactantius’ De mortibus persecutorum ............... 183  
Volume 7  
STUDIA PATRISTICA LXXXI  
HEALTH, MEDICINE, AND CHRISTIANITY IN LATE ANTIQUITY  
(ed. Jared Secord, Heidi Marx-Wolf and Christoph Markschies)  
Jared SecorD  
Introduction: Medicine beyond Galen in the Roman Empire and  
Late Antiquity......................................................................................  
1
METHODOLOGICAL CONSIDERATIONS  
Christoph Markschies  
Demons and Disease ........................................................................... 11  
Ellen MuehlBerger  
Theological Anthropology and Medicine: Questions and Directions  
for Research......................................................................................... 37  
Table of Contents  
9
CHRISTIANS, DOCTORS, AND MEDICAL KNOWLEDGE  
Jared SecorD  
Galen and the Theodotians: Embryology and Adoptionism in the  
Christian Schools of Rome ................................................................. 51  
Róbert somos  
Origen on the Kidneys ........................................................................ 65  
Heidi marx-wolF  
The Good Physician: Imperial Doctors and Medical Professionaliza-  
tion in Late Antiquity.......................................................................... 79  
Stefan hoDges-kluck  
Religious Education and the Health of the Soul according to Basil  
of Caesarea and the Emperor Julian ................................................... 91  
Jessica Wright  
John Chrysostom and the Rhetoric of Cerebral Vulnerability........... 109  
CHRISTIAN PERSPECTIVES ON DEATH,  
DISABILITY, AND ILLNESS  
Helen Rhee  
Portrayal of Patients in Early Christian Writings............................... 127  
Meghan Henning  
Metaphorical, Punitive, and Pedagogical Blindness in Hell .............. 139  
Maria E. DoerFler  
The Sense of an Ending: Childhood Death and Parental Benefit in  
Late Ancient Rhetoric ......................................................................... 153  
Brenda Llewellyn Ihssen  
‘Waiting to see and know’: Disgust, Fear and Indifference in The  
Miracles of St. Artemios...................................................................... 161  
CONCEPTIONS OF VIRGINITY  
Michael RosenBerg  
Physical Virginity in the Protevangelium of James, the Mishnah, and  
Late Antique Syriac Poetry................................................................. 177  
10  
Table of Contents  
Julia Kelto Lillis  
Who Opens the Womb? Fertility and Virginity in Patristic Texts.... 187  
Caroline Musgrove  
Debating Virginity in the Late Alexandrian School of Medicine...... 203  
Volume 8  
STUDIA PATRISTICA LXXXII  
DEMONS  
(ed. Sophie Lunn-Rockliffe)  
Sophie lunn-rockliFFe  
Introduction .........................................................................................  
1
7
Gregory smith  
Augustine on Demons’ Bodies ...........................................................  
Sophie lunn-rockliFFe  
Chaotic Mob or Disciplined Army? Collective Bodies of Demons in  
Ascetic Literature ................................................................................ 33  
Travis W. Proctor  
Dining with ‘Inhuman’ Demons: Greco-Roman Sacrifice, Demonic  
Ritual, and the Christian Body in Clement of Alexandria................. 51  
Gregory wieBe  
Augustine on Diabolical Sacraments and the Devil’s Body .............. 73  
Katie hager conroy  
‘A Kind of Lofty Tribunal’: The Gathering of Demons for Judgment  
in Cassian’s Conference Eight............................................................ 91  
Volume 9  
STUDIA PATRISTICA LXXXIII  
EMOTIONS  
(ed. Yannis Papadogiannakis)  
Yannis PaPaDogiannakis  
Introduction .........................................................................................  
1
Table of Contents  
11  
J. David WooDington  
Fear and Love: The Emotions of the Household in Chrysostom ...... 19  
Jonathan P. Wilcoxson  
The Machinery of Consolation in John Chrysostom’s Letters to  
Olympias.............................................................................................. 37  
Mark Therrien  
Just an Old-Fashioned Love Song: John Chrysostom’s Exegesis of  
Ps. 41:1-2 ............................................................................................ 73  
Christos SimeliDis  
Emotions in the Poetry of Gregory of Nazianzus .............................. 91  
Yuliia Rozumna  
‘Be Angry and Do Not Sin’. Human Anger in Evagrius of Pontus  
and Gregory of Nyssa ......................................................................... 103  
Mark Roosien  
‘Emulate Their Mystical Order’: Awe and Liturgy in John Chrysos-  
tom’s Angelic πολιτεία ...................................................................... 115  
Peter Moore  
Deploying Emotional Intelligence: John Chrysostom’s Relational  
Emotional Vocabulary in his Beatitude Homilies.............................. 131  
Clair E. Mesick  
The Perils and Virtues of Laughter in the Works of John Chrysos-  
tom....................................................................................................... 139  
Andrew Mellas  
Tears of Compunction in John Chrysostom’s On Eutropius ............. 159  
Maria VerhoeFF  
Seeking Friendship with Saul: John Chrysostom’s Portrayal of  
David ................................................................................................... 173  
Blake Leyerle  
Animal Passions. Chrysostom’s Use of Animal Imagery .................. 185  
Justus T. Ghormley  
Gratitude: A Panacea for the Passions in John Chrysostom’s Com-  
mentary on the Psalms........................................................................ 203  
12  
Table of Contents  
Brian Dunkle  
John Chrysostom’s Community of Anger Management.................... 217  
Andrew CrisliP  
The Shepherd of Hermas and Early Christian Emotional Formation 231  
Niki Kasumi Clements  
Emotions and Ascetic Formation in John Cassian’s Collationes....... 241  
Margaret Blume FreDDoso  
The Value of Job’s Grief in John Chrysostom’s Commentary on Job:  
How John Blesses with Job’s Tears ................................................... 271  
Jesse siragan arlen  
‘Let Us Mourn Continuously’: John Chrysostom and the Early  
Christian Transformation of Mourning............................................... 289  
Martin HinterBerger  
Basil of Caesarea and Gregory of Nazianzus Speaking about Anger  
and Envy: Some Remarks on the Fathers’ Methodology of Treating  
Emotions and Modern Emotion Studies............................................. 313  
Volume 10  
STUDIA PATRISTICA LXXXIV  
EVAGRIUS BETWEEN ORIGEN, THE CAPPADOCIANS,  
AND NEOPLATONISM  
(ed. Ilaria Ramelli, with the collaboration of Kevin Corrigan,  
Giulio Maspero and Monica Tobon)  
Ilaria Ramelli  
Introduction .........................................................................................  
1
Samuel FernÁnDez  
The Pedagogical Structure of Origen’s De principiis and its Christol-  
ogy ....................................................................................................... 15  
Martin C. Wenzel  
The Omnipotence of God as a Challenge for Theology in Origen and  
Gregory of Nyssa ................................................................................ 23  
Table of Contents  
13  
Miguel Brugarolas  
Theological Remarks on Gregory of Nyssa’s Christological Language  
of ‘Mixture’ ......................................................................................... 39  
Ilaria Vigorelli  
Soul’s Dance in Clement, Plotinus and Gregory of Nyssa ................ 59  
Giulio MasPero  
Isoangelia in Gregory of Nyssa and Origen on the Background of  
Plotinus................................................................................................ 77  
Ilaria Ramelli  
Response to the Workshop, “Theology and Philosophy between  
Origen and Gregory of Nyssa”........................................................... 101  
Mark J. EDwarDs  
Dunamis and the Christian Trinity in the Fourth Century ................. 105  
Kevin corrigan  
Trauma before Trauma: Recognizing, Healing and Transforming the  
Wounds of Soul-Mind in the Works of Evagrius of Pontus.............. 123  
Monica ToBon  
The Place of God: Stability and Apophasis in Evagrius ................... 137  
Theo KoBusch  
Practical Knowledge in ‘Christian Philosophy’: A New Way to  
God ...................................................................................................... 157  
Ilaria Ramelli  
Gregory Nyssen’s and Evagrius’ Biographical and Theological Rela-  
tions: Origen’s Heritage and Neoplatonism....................................... 165  
Volume 11  
STUDIA PATRISTICA LXXXV  
AMBROSE OF MILAN  
Isabella D’auria  
Polemiche antipagane: Ambrogio (epist. 10, 73, 8) e Prudenzio  
(c. Symm. 2, 773-909) contro Simmaco (rel. 3, 10)...........................  
1
14  
Table of Contents  
Victoria zimmerl-Panagl  
Videtur nobis in sermone revivescere… Preparing a New Critical  
Edition of Ambrose’s Orationes funebres.......................................... 15  
Andrew M. SelBy  
Ambrose’s ‘Inspired’ Moderation of Tertullian’s Christian Discipline 23  
Sarah emanuel  
Virgin Heroes and Cross-Dressing Kings: Reading Ambrose’s On  
Virgins 2.4 as Carnivalesque............................................................... 41  
Francesco luBian  
Ambrose’s Disticha and John ‘Reclining on Christ’s Breast’ (Ambr.,  
Tituli II [21], 1) ................................................................................... 51  
D.H. williams  
Ambrose as an Apologist.................................................................... 65  
Brendan A. Harris  
‘Where the Sanctification is One, the Nature is One’: Pro-Nicene  
Pneumatology in Ambrose of Milan’s Baptismal Theology.............. 77  
David VoPŘaDa  
Bonum mihi quod humiliasti me. Ambrose’s Theology of Humility  
and Humiliation................................................................................... 87  
Paola Francesca Moretti  
‘Competing’ exempla in Ambrose’s De officiis ................................. 95  
Metha Hokke  
Scent as Metaphor for the Bonding of Christ and the Virgin in  
Ambrose’s De virginitate 11.60-12.68............................................... 107  
J. warren smith  
Transcending Resentment: Ambrose, David, and Magnanimitas...... 121  
Andrew M. Harmon  
Aspects of Moral Perfection in Ambrose’s De officiis ...................... 133  
Han-luen kantzer komline  
From Building Blocks to Blueprints: Augustine’s Reception of  
Ambrose’s Commentary on Luke........................................................ 153  
Table of Contents  
15  
Hedwig SchmalzgruBer  
Biblical Epic as Scriptural Exegesis – Reception of Ambrose in the  
So-called Heptateuch Poet .................................................................. 167  
Carmen Angela cvetkoviĆ  
Episcopal Literary Networks in the Late Antique West: Niceta of  
Remesiana and Ambrose of Milan...................................................... 177  
Stephen CooPer  
Ambrose in Reformation Zürich: Heinrich Bullinger’s Use of  
Ambrosiaster’s Commentaries on Paul............................................... 185  
Volume 12  
STUDIA PATRISTICA LXXXVI  
AUGUSTINE ON CONSCIENTIA  
(ed. Diana Stanciu)  
Diana stanciu  
Introduction .........................................................................................  
1
3
Allan FitzgeralD  
Augustine, Conscience and the Inner Teacher ...................................  
Enrique A. eguiarte  
Conscientia (…) itineribus (…) in saptientiam .................................. 13  
matthew w. knotts  
With Apologies to Jiminy Cricket. The Early Augustine’s ‘Sapiential’  
Account of conscientia........................................................................ 21  
Anne-Isabelle Bouton-touBoulic  
Conscientiae requies (Conf. X, 30, 41): Sleep, Consciousness and  
Conscience in Augustine..................................................................... 37  
Andrea Bizzozero  
Beati mundi cordes (Mt 5:8). Coscienza, Conoscenza e Uisio Dei in  
Agostino prima del 411....................................................................... 55  
Josef lÖssl  
How ‘Bad’ is Augustine’s ‘Bad Conscience’ (mala conscientia)? ... 89  
16  
Table of Contents  
Marianne DJuth  
The Polemics of Moral Conscience in Augustine.............................. 97  
Diana stanciu  
Conscientia, capax Dei and Salvation in Augustine: What Would  
Augustine Say on the ‘Explanatory Gap’?......................................... 111  
Jeremy W. Bergstrom  
Augustine on the Judgment of Conscience and the Glory of Man.... 119  
Mark clavier  
A Persuasive God: Conscience and the Rhetoric of Delight in  
Augustine’s Interpretation of Romans 7............................................. 135  
John comstock  
The Augustinian Conscientia: A New Approach............................... 141  
Jérôme lagouanÈre  
Augustin, lecteur de Sénèque: le cas de la bona uoluntas................. 153  
Gábor kenDeFFy  
Will and Moral Responsibility in Augustine’s Works on Lying ....... 163  
Volume 13  
STUDIA PATRISTICA LXXXVII  
AUGUSTINE IN LATE MEDIEVAL PHILOSOPHY  
AND THEOLOGY  
(ed. John T. Slotemaker and Jeffrey C. Witt)  
David C. Fink & John T. slotemaker  
In Memoriam David C. Steinmetz......................................................  
1
3
John T. slotemaker & Jeffrey C. witt  
Introduction .........................................................................................  
John T. slotemaker  
The Reception of Augustine’s Thought in the Later Middle Ages:  
A Historiographical Introduction ........................................................  
5
Peter earDley  
Augustinian Science or Aristotelian Rhetoric? The Nature of Theol-  
ogy According to Giles of Rome........................................................ 23  
Table of Contents  
17  
Bernd goehring  
Giles of Rome on Human Cognition: Aristotelian and Augustinian  
Principles ............................................................................................. 35  
Christopher M. woJtulewicz  
The Reception of Augustine in the Theology of Alexander de Sancto  
Elpidio ................................................................................................. 47  
Graham mcaleer  
1277 and the Sensations of the Damned: Peter John Olivi and the  
Augustinian Origins of Early Modern Angelism ............................... 59  
Florian wÖller  
The Bible as Argument: Augustine in the Literal Exegesis of Peter  
Auriol (c. 1280-1322) and Nicholas of Lyra (c. 1270-1349)............. 67  
Severin V. kitanov  
Richard FitzRalph on Whether Cognition and Volition are Really the  
Same: Solving an Augustinian Puzzle................................................ 81  
Simon nolan  
Augustine in Richard FitzRalph (c. 1300-1360) ................................ 95  
Jack harDing Bell  
Loving Justice: Cicero, Augustine, and the Nature of Politics in  
Robert Holcot’s Wisdom of Solomon Commentary............................ 109  
John T. slotemaker  
Peter Lombard’s Inheritance: The Use of Augustine’s De Trinitate  
in Gregory of Rimini’s Discussion of the Divine Processions .......... 123  
John W. Peck  
Gregory of Rimini’s Augustinian Defense of a World ab aeterno.... 135  
Jeffrey C. witt  
Tradition, Authority, and the Grounds for Belief in Late Fourteenth-  
Century Theology................................................................................ 147  
Pekka kÄrkkÄinen  
Augustinian, Humanist or What? Martin Luther’s Marginal Notes  
on Augustine........................................................................................ 161  
David C. Fink  
Bullshitting Augustine: Patristic Rhetoric and Theological Dialectic  
in Philipp Melanchthon’s Apologia for the Augsburg Confession .... 167  
18  
Table of Contents  
Ueli zahnD  
The Early John Calvin and Augustine: Some Reconsiderations ....... 181  
Volume 14  
STUDIA PATRISTICA LXXXVIII  
LATREIA AND IDOLATRY:  
AUGUSTINE AND THE QUEST FOR RIGHT RELATIONSHIP  
(ed. Paul Camacho and Veronica Roberts)  
Veronica RoBerts & Paul Camacho  
Introduction .........................................................................................  
1
3
Michael T. Camacho  
‘Having nothing yet possessing all things’: Worship as the Sacrifice  
of Being not our Own .........................................................................  
Erik J. van versenDaal  
The Symbolism of Love: Use as Praise in St. Augustine’s Doctrine  
of Creation........................................................................................... 21  
Paul Camacho  
Ours and Not Ours: Private and Common Goods in Augustine’s  
Anthropology of Desire....................................................................... 35  
Christopher M. Seiler  
Non sibi arroget minister plus quam quod ut minister (S. 266.3):  
St. Augustine’s Imperative for Ministerial Humility.......................... 49  
Robert McFaDDen  
Becoming Friends with Oneself: Cicero in the Cassiciacum Dia-  
logues................................................................................................... 57  
Veronica RoBerts  
Idolatry as the Source of Injustice in Augustine’s De ciuitate Dei ... 69  
Peter Busch  
Augustine’s Limited Dialogue with the Philosophers in De ciuitate  
Dei 19 .................................................................................................. 79  
Joshua Nunziato  
Negotiating a Good Return? St. Augustine on the Economics of  
Secular Sacrifice.................................................................................. 87  
Table of Contents  
19  
Volume 15  
STUDIA PATRISTICA LXXXIX  
THE FOUNTAIN AND THE FLOOD:  
MAXIMUS THE CONFESSOR AND PHILOSOPHICAL ENQUIRY  
(ed. Sotiris Mitralexis)  
Sotiris mitralexis  
Introduction .........................................................................................  
1
3
Dionysios skliris  
The Ontological Implications of Maximus the Confessor’s Eschatol-  
ogy .......................................................................................................  
Nicholas louDovikos  
Consubstantiality beyond Perichoresis: Personal Threeness, Intra-divine  
Relations, and Personal Consubstantiality in Augustine’s, Thomas  
Aquinas’ and Maximus the Confessor’s Trinitarian Theologies........ 33  
Torstein Theodor tolleFsen  
Whole and Part in the Philosophy of St Maximus the Confessor ..... 47  
Sebastian mateiescu  
Counting Natures and Hypostases: St Maximus the Confessor on the  
Role of Number in Christology .......................................................... 63  
David BraDshaw  
St. Maximus on Time, Eternity, and Divine Knowledge................... 79  
Sotiris mitralexis  
A Coherent Maximian Spatiotemporality: Attempting a Close Reading  
of Sections Thirty-six to Thirty-nine from the Tenth Ambiguum ...... 95  
Vladimir cvetkoviĆ  
The Concept of Delimitation of Creatures in Maximus the Confessor 117  
Demetrios harPer  
The Ontological Ethics of St. Maximus the Confessor and the Concept  
of Shame.............................................................................................. 129  
Smilen markov  
Maximus’ Concept of Human Will through the Interpretation of  
Johannes Damascenus and Photius of Constantinople....................... 143  
20  
Table of Contents  
John Panteleimon manoussakis  
St. Augustine and St. Maximus the Confessor between the Beginning  
and the End.......................................................................................... 155  
Volume 16  
STUDIA PATRISTICA XC  
CHRIST AS ONTOLOGICAL PARADIGM IN  
EARLY BYZANTINE THOUGHT  
(ed. Marcin Podbielski)  
Anna Zhyrkova  
Introduction .........................................................................................  
1
3
Sergey Trostyanskiy  
The Compresence of Opposites in Christ in St. Cyril of Alexandria’s  
Oikonomia ...........................................................................................  
Anna Zhyrkova  
From Christ to Human Individual: Christ as Ontological Paradigm  
in Early Byzantine Thought................................................................ 25  
Grzegorz KotŁowski  
A Philological Contribution to the Question of Dating Leontius of  
Jerusalem ............................................................................................. 49  
Marcin PoDBielski  
A Picture in Need of a Theory: Hypostasis in Maximus the Confes-  
sor’s Ambigua ad Thomam ................................................................. 57  
Volume 17  
STUDIA PATRISTICA XCI  
BIBLICA  
Camille lePeigneux  
Léphod de David dansant devant l’arche (2S. 6:14): problèmes tex-  
tuels et exégèse patristique..................................................................  
3
Stephen Waers  
Isaiah 44-5 and Competing Conceptions of Monotheism in the 2nd  
and 3rd Centuries ................................................................................ 11  
Table of Contents  
21  
Simon C. Mimouni  
Jésus de Nazareth et sa famille ont-ils appartenus à la tribu des prêtres ?  
Quelques remarques et réflexions pour une recherche nouvelle........ 19  
Joseph VerheyDen  
The So-Called Catena in Marcum of Victor of Antioch: Throwing  
Light on Mark with a Not-So-Little Help from Matthew and Luke .. 47  
Miriam Decock  
The Good Shepherd of John 10: A Case Study of New Testament  
Exegesis in the Schools of Alexandria and Antioch .......................... 63  
H.A.G. Houghton  
The Layout of Early Latin Commentaries on the Pauline Epistles and  
their Oldest Manuscripts ..................................................................... 71  
David M. Reis  
Mapping Exilic Imaginaries: Greco-Roman Discourses of Displace-  
ment and the Book of Revelation ....................................................... 113  
Stephan Witetschek  
Polycrates of Ephesus and the ‘Canonical John’................................ 127  
Gregory Allen RoBBins  
‘Many a Gaud and a Glittering Toy’ (Sayers): Fourth-Century Gospel  
Books................................................................................................... 135  
PHILOSOPHICA, THEOLOGICA, ETHICA  
Frances Young  
Riddles and Puzzles: God’s Indirect Word in Patristic Hermeneutics. 149  
Methody zinkovskiy  
Hypostatic Characteristics of Notions of Thought, Knowledge and  
Cognition in the Greek Patristic Thought........................................... 157  
Elena Ene D-Vasilescu  
Early Christianity about the Notions of Time and the Redemption of  
the Soul................................................................................................ 167  
Jack Bates  
Theosis Kata To Ephikton: The History of a Pious Hedge-Phrase ... 183  
22  
Table of Contents  
James K. Lee  
The Church and the Holy Spirit: Ecclesiology and Pneumatology in  
Tertullian, Cyprian, and Augustine..................................................... 189  
Maria Lissek  
In Search of the Roots. Reference to Patristic Christology in Gilbert  
Crispin’s Disputation with a Jew........................................................ 207  
Pak-Wah Lai  
Comparing Patristic and Chinese Medical Anthropologies: Insights  
for Chinese Contextual Theology ....................................................... 213  
HAGIOGRAPHICA  
Katherine milco  
Ad Prodendam Virtutis Memoriam: Encomiastic Prefaces in Tacitus’  
Agricola and Latin Christian Hagiography......................................... 227  
Megan Devore  
Catechumeni, Not ‘New Converts’: Revisiting the Passio Perpetuae  
et Felicitatis......................................................................................... 237  
Christoph Birkner  
Hagiography and Autobiography in Cyril of Scythopolis.................. 249  
Flavia Ruani  
Preliminary Notes on Edifying Stories in Syriac Hagiographical Col-  
lections................................................................................................. 257  
Nathan D. HowarD  
Sacred Spectacle in the Biographies of Gorgonia and Macrina......... 267  
Marta SzaDa  
The Life of Balthild and the Rise of Aristocratic Sanctity ................ 275  
Robert WiŚniewski  
Eastern, Western and Local Habits in the Early Cult of Relics......... 283  
ASCETICA  
Maria Giulia Genghini  
‘Go, sit in your cell, and your cell will teach you everything’ (AP  
Moses 6): How the Physical Environment Shaped the Spirituality of  
Early Egyptian Monasticism............................................................... 299  
Table of Contents  
23  
Rodrigo Álvarez gutiÉrrez  
El concepto de xénitéia en la hagiografía Monástica primitiva......... 313  
Sean MoBerg  
Examination of Conscience in the Apophthegmata Patrum .............. 325  
Daniel Lemeni  
The Fascination of the Desert: Aspects of Spiritual Guidance in the  
Apophthegmata Patrum....................................................................... 333  
Janet TimBie  
‘Pay for Our Sins’: A Shared Theme in the Pachomian Koinonia and  
the White Monastery Federation......................................................... 347  
Paula Tutty  
The Political and Philanthropic Role of Monastic Figures and Mon-  
asteries as Revealed in Fourth-Century Coptic and Greek Corres-  
pondence.............................................................................................. 353  
Marianne SÁghy  
Monica, the Ascetic............................................................................. 363  
Gáspár Parlagi  
The Letter Ad filios Dei of Saint Macarius the Egyptian – Questions  
and Hypotheses.................................................................................... 377  
Becky littlechilDs  
Notes on Ascetic ‘Regression’ in Asterius’ Liber ad Renatum Mona-  
chum..................................................................................................... 385  
Laura Soureli  
The ‘Prayer of the Heart’ in the Philokalia: Questions and Caveats 391  
Brouria Bitton-ashkelony  
Monastic Hybridity and Anti-Exegetical Discourse: From Philoxenus  
of Mabbug to Dadišo Qatraya ................................................................ 417  
Volume 18  
STUDIA PATRISTICA XCII  
LITURGICA AND TRACTATUS SYMBOLI  
Liuwe H. Westra  
Creating a Theological Difference: The Myth of Two Grammatical  
Constructions with Latin Credo..........................................................  
3
24  
Table of Contents  
Tarmo Toom  
Tractatus symboli: A Brief Pre-Baptismal Explanation of the Creed.. 15  
Joseph G. Mueller  
The Trinitarian Doctrine of the Apostolic Constitutions.................... 25  
Gregory Tucker  
‘O Day of Resurrection!’: The Paschal Mystery in Hymns.............. 41  
Maria munkholt christensen  
Witnessed by Angels: The Role of Angels in Relation to Prayer in  
Four Ante-Nicene Euchological Treatises.......................................... 49  
Barry M. Craig  
He Lifted to You? Lost and Gained in Translation ........................... 57  
Anna Adams Petrin  
Reconsidering the ‘Egyptian Connection’ in the Anaphora of Fourth-  
Century Jerusalem ............................................................................... 65  
Anthony Gelston  
The Post-Sanctus in the East Syrian Anaphoras ................................ 77  
Graham FielD  
Breaking Boundaries: The Cosmic Dimension of Worship .............. 83  
George A. Bevan  
The Sequence of the First Four Sessions of the Council of Chalcedon 91  
ORIENTALIA  
Todd E. French  
Just Deserts: Origen’s Lingering Influence on Divine Justice in the  
Hagiographies of John of Ephesus...................................................... 105  
Benedict M. Guevin  
Dialogue between Death and the Devil in Saint Ephrem the Syrian  
and Saint Romanos the Melodist ........................................................ 113  
Paul M. PasQuesi  
Qnoma in Narsai: Anticipating Energeia........................................... 119  
Table of Contents  
25  
David G.K. Taylor  
Rufinus the Silver Merchant’s Miaphysite Refutation of Leontius of  
Byzantium’s Epaporemata (CPG 6814): A Rediscovered Syriac  
Text...................................................................................................... 127  
Valentina Duca  
Pride in the Thought of Isaac of Nineveh .......................................... 137  
Valentin Vesa  
The Divine Vision in Isaac of Niniveh and the East Syriac Christology 149  
Theresia Hainthaler  
Colossians 1:15 in the Christological Reflection of East Syrian  
Authors ................................................................................................ 165  
Michael Penn, Nicholas R. Howe & Kaylynn CrawForD  
Automated Syriac Script Charts.......................................................... 175  
Stephen J. Davis  
Cataloguing the Coptic and Arabic Manuscripts in the Monastery of  
the Syrians: A Preliminary Report ..................................................... 179  
Damien LaBaDie  
A Newly Attributed Coptic Encomium on Saint Stephen (BHO 1093) 187  
Anahit Avagyan  
Die armenische Übersetzung der pseudo-athanasianischen Homilie  
De passione et cruce domini (CPG 2247).......................................... 195  
CRITICA ET PHILOLOGICA  
B.N. WolFe  
The Gothic Palimpsest of Bologna..................................................... 205  
Meredith Danezan  
Proverbe (paroimia) et cursus spirituel : l’apport de l’Épitomé de la  
Chaîne de Procope............................................................................... 209  
Aaron Pelttari  
Lector inueniet: A Commonplace of Late Antiquity ......................... 215  
Peter van nuFFelen  
The Poetics of Christian History in Late Antiquity ........................... 227  
26  
Table of Contents  
Yuliya Minets  
Languages of Christianity in Late Antiquity: Between Universalism  
and Cultural Superiority...................................................................... 247  
Peter F. SchaDler  
Reading the Self by Reading the Other: A Hermeneutical Key to the  
Reading of Sacred Texts in Late Antiquity and Byzantium .............. 261  
HISTORICA  
Peter GemeinharDt  
Teaching Religion in Late Antiquity: Divine and Human Agency... 271  
David WooDs  
Constantine, Aurelian, and Aphaca..................................................... 279  
Luise Marion Frenkel  
Procedural Similarities between Fourth- and Fifth-Century Christian  
Synods and the Roman Senates: Myth, Politics or Cultural Identity? 293  
Maria KonstantiniDou  
Travelling and Trading in the Greek Fathers: Faraway Lands, Peoples  
and Products ........................................................................................ 303  
Theodore De Bruyn  
Historians, Bishops, Amulets, Scribes, and Rites: Interpreting a Chris-  
tian Practice ......................................................................................... 317  
Catherine C. Taylor  
Educated Susanna: Female Orans, Sarcophagi, and the Typology of  
Woman Wisdom in Late Antique Art and Iconography .................... 339  
David L. Riggs  
Contesting the Legacy and Patronage of Saint Cyprian in Vandal  
Carthage............................................................................................... 357  
Jordina sales-carBonell  
The Fathers of the Church and their Role in Promoting Christian  
Constructions in Hispania................................................................... 371  
Bethany V. Williams  
The Significance of the Senses: An Exploration into the Multi-  
Sensory Experience of Faith for the Lay Population of Christianity  
during the Fourth and Fifth Centuries C.E......................................... 381  
Table of Contents  
27  
Jacob A. Latham  
Adventus, Occursus, and the Christianization of Rome ..................... 397  
Teodor tăBuȘ  
The Orthodoxy of Emperor Justinian’s Christian Faith as a Matter  
of Roman Law (CJ I,1,5-8)................................................................. 411  
Nicholas Mataya  
Charity Before Division: The Strange Case of Severinus of Noricum  
and the Pseudo-Evangelisation of the Rugians................................... 423  
Christian Hornung  
Die Konstruktion christlicher Identität. Funktion und Bedeutung der  
Apostasie im antiken Christentum (4.-6. Jahrhundert n. Chr.) .......... 431  
Ronald A.N. KyDD  
Growing Evidence of Christianity’s Establishment in China in the  
Late-Patristic Era................................................................................. 441  
Luis SalÉs  
‘Aristotelian’ as a Lingua Franca: Rationality in Christian Self-  
Representation under the ‘Abbasids ................................................... 453  
Volume 19  
STUDIA PATRISTICA XCIII  
THE FIRST TWO CENTURIES  
Joshua Kinlaw  
Exegesis and Homonoia in First Clement ..........................................  
3
Janelle Peters  
The Phoenix in 1Clement.................................................................... 17  
Jonathan E. Soyars  
Clement of Rome’s Reconstruction of Job’s Character for Corinth:  
A Contextual Reading of the Composite Quotation of LXX Job 1-2  
in 1Clem. 17.3 ..................................................................................... 27  
Ingo SchaaF  
The Earliest Sibylline Attestations in the Patristic Reception: Eru-  
dition and Religion in the 2nd Century AD ........................................ 35  
28  
Table of Contents  
J. Christopher EDwarDs  
Identifying the Lord in the Epistle of Barnabas................................. 51  
Donna Rizk  
The Apology of Aristides: the Armenian Version............................. 61  
Paul R. Gilliam III  
Ignatius of Antioch: The Road to Chalcedon? .................................. 69  
Alexander B. Miller  
Polemic and Credal Refinement in Ignatius of Antioch .................... 81  
Shaily shashikant Patel  
The ‘Starhymn’ of Ignatius’ Epistle to the Ephesians: Re-Appropria-  
tion as Polemic .................................................................................... 93  
Paul Hartog  
The Good News in Old Texts? The ‘Gospel’ and the ‘Archives’ in  
Ign.Phld. 8.2 ........................................................................................ 105  
Stuart R. Thomson  
The Philosopher’s Journey: Philosophical and Christian Conversions  
in the Second Century......................................................................... 123  
Andrew Hayes  
The Significance of Samaritanism for Justin Martyr ......................... 141  
Micah M. Miller  
What’s in a Name?: Titles of Christ in Justin Martyr....................... 155  
M aDryael tong  
Reading Gender in Justin Martyr: New Insights from Old Apologies 165  
Pavel DuDzik  
Tatian the Assyrian and Greek Rhetoric: Homer’s Heroes Agamemnon,  
Nestor and Thersites in Tatian’s Oratio ad Graecos ......................... 179  
Stuart E. Parsons  
Trading Places: Faithful Job and Doubtful Autolycus in Theophilus’  
Apology ............................................................................................... 191  
László PerenDy  
Theophilus’ Silence about Aristotle. A Clandestine Approval of his  
View on the Mortality of the Soul?.................................................... 199  
Table of Contents  
29  
Roland M. Sokolowski  
‘Zealous for the Covenant of Christ’: An Inquiry into the Lost Career  
of Irenaeus of Lyons ........................................................................... 213  
Eric covington  
Irenaeus, Ephesians, and Union with the Spirit: Examining the  
Scriptural Basis of Unity with the Spirit in AH V 20.2..................... 219  
Sverre Elgvin LieD  
Irenaeus of Lyons and the Eucharistic Altar in Heaven..................... 229  
John KauFman  
The Kingdom of the Son in the Theology of Irenaeus ...................... 237  
Thomas D. mcglothlin  
Why Are All These Damned People Rising? Paul and the Generality  
of the Resurrection in Irenaeus and Tertullian ................................... 243  
Scott D. Moringiello  
Allegory and Typology in Irenaeus of Lyon...................................... 255  
Francesca Minonne  
Aulus Gellius and Irenaeus of Lyons in the Cultural Context of the  
Second Century AD ............................................................................ 265  
Eugen MaFtei  
Irénée de Lyon et Athanase d’Alexandrie: ressemblances et diffé-  
rences entre leurs sotériologies ........................................................... 275  
István M. BugÁr  
Melito and the Body............................................................................ 303  
APOCRYPHA AND GNOSTICA  
Pamela mullins reaves  
Gnosis in Alexandria: A Study in Ancient Christian Interpretation  
and Intra-Group Dynamics.................................................................. 315  
Csaba ÖtvÖs  
Creation and Epiphany? Theological Symbolism in the Creation  
Narrative of On the Origin of the World (NHC II 5)......................... 325  
30  
Table of Contents  
Hugo LunDhaug  
The Dialogue of the Savior (NHC III,5) as a Monastic Text ............ 335  
Kristine Toft RoslanD  
Fatherhood and the Lack thereof in the Apocryphon of John............ 347  
Jeremy W. Barrier  
Abraham’s Seed: Tracing Pneuma as a Material Substance from  
Paul’s Writings to the Apocryphon of John........................................ 357  
Volume 20  
STUDIA PATRISTICA XCIV  
FROM TERTULLIAN TO TYCONIUS  
Anni Maria Laato  
Tertullian, Adversus Iudaeos Literature, and the ‘Killing of the  
Prophets’-Argument ............................................................................  
1
Ian L.S. BalFour  
Tertullian and Roman Law – What Do We (Not) Know? ................ 11  
Benjamin D. HauPt  
Tertullian’s Text of Galatians............................................................. 23  
Stéphanie E. BinDer  
Tertullien face à la romanisation de l’Afrique du Nord : une discus-  
sion de quelques aspects ..................................................................... 29  
Christopher T. BounDs  
The Doctrine of Christian Perfection in Tertullian ............................ 45  
Kathryn thostenson  
Serving Two Masters: Tertullian on Marital and Christian Duties ... 55  
Edwina MurPhy  
Widows, Welfare and the Wayward: 1Timothy 5 in Cyprian’s Ad  
Quirinum.............................................................................................. 67  
Charles BoBertz  
Almsgiving as Patronage: The Role of the Patroness in Third Cen-  
tury North African Christianity........................................................... 75  
Table of Contents  
31  
Daniel Becerra  
Origen, the Stoics, and the Rhetoric of Recitation: Spiritual Exercise  
and the Exhortation to Martyrdom ..................................................... 85  
Antti Laato  
A Cold Case Reopened: A Jewish Source on Christianity Used by  
Celsus and the Toledot Yeshu Literature – From Counter-Exegetical  
Arguments to Full-Blown Counter-Story ........................................... 99  
Eric ScherBenske  
Origen, Manuscript Variation, and a Lacking Gospel Harmony ....... 111  
Jennifer Otto  
Origen’s Criticism of Philo of Alexandria ......................................... 121  
Riemer Roukema  
The Retrieval of Origen’s Commentary on Micah............................. 131  
Giovanni hermanin De reichenFelD  
Resurrection and Prophecy: The Spirit in Origen’s Exegesis of  
Lazarus and Caiaphas in John 11 ....................................................... 143  
Elizabeth Ann Dively lauro  
The Meaning and Significance of Scripture’s Sacramental Nature  
within Origen’s Thought..................................................................... 153  
David Neal GreenwooD  
Celsus, Origen, and the Eucharist....................................................... 187  
Vito limone  
Origen on the Song of Songs. A Reassessment and Proposal of Dating  
of his Writings on the Song ................................................................ 195  
Allan E. Johnson  
The Causes of Things: Origen’s Treatises On Prayer and On First  
Principles and His Exegetical Method ............................................... 205  
Brian Barrett  
‘Of His Fullness We Have All Received’: Origen on Scripture’s  
Unity.................................................................................................... 211  
Mark Randall James  
Anatomist of the Prophetic Words: Origen on Scientific and Herme-  
neutic Method...................................................................................... 219  
32  
Table of Contents  
Joseph Lenow  
Patience and Judgment in the Christology of Cyprian of Carthage... 233  
Mattias Gassman  
The Conversion of Cyprian’s Rhetoric? Towards a New Reading of  
Ad Donatum......................................................................................... 247  
Laetitia Ciccolini  
Le texte de 1Cor. 7:34 chez Cyprien de Carthage............................. 259  
Dawn lavalle  
Feasting at the End: The Eschatological Symposia of Methodius of  
Olympus and Julian the Apostate ....................................................... 269  
Marie-Noëlle Vignal  
Méthode d’Olympe, lecteur et exégète de Saint Paul ........................ 285  
Johannes Breuer  
The Rhetoric of Persuasion as Hermeneutical Key to Arnobius’  
Adversus nationes................................................................................ 295  
Volume 21  
STUDIA PATRISTICA XCV  
THE FOURTH CENTURY  
Elizabeth DePalma Digeser  
Pseudo-Justin’s Cohortatio ad Graecos and the Great Persecution ..  
3
Atsuko Gotoh  
The ‘Conversion’ of Constantine the Great: His Religious Legislation  
in the Theodosian Code....................................................................... 13  
Vladimir latinovic  
Arius Conservativus? The Question of Arius’ Theological Belonging 27  
Sébastien Morlet  
Eusèbe le grammairien. Note sur les Questions évangéliques (À Mari-  
nos, 2) et une scholie sur Pindare....................................................... 43  
Thomas O’Loughlin  
Some Hermeneutical Assumptions Latent within the Gospel Appa-  
ratus of Eusebius of Caesarea............................................................. 51  
Table of Contents  
33  
Michael Bland simmons  
Exegesis and Hermeneutics in Eusebius of Caesarea’s Theophany  
(Book IV): The Contemporary Fulfillment of Jesus’ Prophecies...... 65  
Sophie Cartwright  
Should we Grieve and Be Afraid? Christ’s Passions versus the Pas-  
sions of the Soul in Athanasius of Alexandria................................... 77  
William G. rusch  
Athanasius of Alexandria and ‘Sola Scriptura’.................................. 87  
Lois M. Farag  
Organon in Athanasius’ De incarnatione: A Case of Textual Inter-  
polation................................................................................................ 93  
Donna R. hawk-reinharD  
The Role of the Holy Spirit in Cyril of Jerusalem’s Sacramental  
Theology.............................................................................................. 107  
Olga Lorgeoux  
Choice and Will in the Catecheses of Cyril of Jerusalem.................. 119  
Florian Zacher  
Marius Victorinus, Opus ad Candidum. An Analysis of its Rhetorical  
Structure............................................................................................... 127  
CAPPADOCIAN WRITERS  
Claudio moreschini  
Is it Possible to Speak of ‘Cappadocian Theology’ as a System?..... 139  
Nienke M. Vos  
‘Teach us to pray’: Self-Understanding in Macrina’s Final Prayer... 165  
Adam Rasmussen  
Defending Moses. Understanding Basil’s Apparent Rejection of  
Allegory in the Hexaemeron............................................................... 175  
Marco Quircio  
A Philological Note to Basil of Caesarea’s Second Homily on the  
Hexaemeron......................................................................................... 183  
34  
Table of Contents  
Mattia C. Chiriatti  
ἀγών/θέα-θέαμα and στάδιον/θέατρον: A Reviewed ἔκφρασις of  
the Spectacle in Basil’s In Gordium martyrem .................................. 189  
Arnaud Perrot  
Une source littéraire de l’Ep. 46 de Basile de Césarée : le traité De  
la véritable intégrité dans la virginité................................................ 201  
Aude Busine  
Basil of Caesarea and the Praise of the City...................................... 209  
Benoît gain  
Le voyage de Basile de Césarée en Orient : hypothèses sur le silence  
des sources externes ............................................................................ 217  
Seumas MacDonalD  
Contested Ground: Basil’s Use of Scripture in Against Eunomius 2 225  
Nikolai liPatov-chicherin  
An Unpublished Funerary Speech (CPG 2936) and the Question of  
Succession to St. Basil the Great........................................................ 237  
Kimberly F. Baker  
Basil and Augustine: Preaching on Care for the Poor....................... 251  
Oliver Langworthy  
Sojourning and the Sojourner in Gregory of Nazianzus .................... 261  
Alexander D. Perkins  
The Grave Politics of Gregory Nazianzen’s Eulogy for Gorgonia.... 269  
Gabrielle Thomas  
Divine, Yet Vulnerable: The Paradoxical Existence of Gregory  
Nazianzen’s Imago Dei....................................................................... 281  
Bradley K. Storin  
Reconsidering Gregory of Nazianzus’ Letter Collection ................... 291  
Andrew raDDe-gallwitz  
Gregory on Gregory: Catechetical Oration 38.................................. 303  
Andrew J. summerson  
Gregory Nazianzus’ Mixture Language in Maximus the Confessor’s  
Ambigua: What the Confessor Learned from the Theologian........... 315  
Table of Contents  
35  
Ryan Clevenger  
Ἔκφρασις and Epistemology in Gregory of Nazianzus.................... 321  
Karen CarDucci  
Implicit Stipulations in the Testamentum of Gregory of Nazianzos  
vis-à-vis the Testamenta of Remigius of Rheims, Caesarius of Arles,  
and Aurelianus of Ravenna................................................................. 331  
Michael J. Petrin  
Eunomius and Gregory of Nyssa on τὸ τῆς εὐσεβείας μυστήριον.. 343  
Andra Jugănaru  
The Function of Miracles in Gregory of Nyssa’s Hagiographical  
Works................................................................................................... 355  
Makrina Finlay  
Gregory of Nyssa’s Framework for the Resurrected Life in The Life  
of St. Macrina...................................................................................... 367  
Marta Przyszychowska  
Three States after Death according to Gregory of Nyssa................... 377  
Ann conway-Jones  
An Ambiguous Type: The Figure of Aaron Interpreted by Gregory  
of Nyssa and Ephrem the Syrian ........................................................ 389  
Robin orton  
The Place of the Eucharist in Gregory of Nyssa’s Soteriology......... 399  
Anne karahan  
Cyclic Shapes and Divine Activity. A Cappadocian Inquiry into  
Byzantine Aesthetics ........................................................................... 405  
Hilary Anne-Marie Mooney  
Eschatological Themes in the Writings of Gregory of Nyssa and  
John Scottus Eriugena......................................................................... 421  
Benjamin Ekman  
‘Natural Contemplation’ in Evagrius Ponticus’ Scholia on Proverbs 431  
Margaret Guise  
The Golden and Saving Chain and its (De)construction: Soterio-  
logical Conversations between Jacques Derrida, Jean-Luc Marion  
and the Cappadocian Fathers .............................................................. 441  
36  
Table of Contents  
Volume 22  
STUDIA PATRISTICA XCVI  
THE SECOND HALF OF THE FOURTH CENTURY  
Kelley SPoerl  
Epiphanius on Jesus’ Digestion ..........................................................  
3
Young Richard Kim  
Nicaea is Not Enough: The Second Creed of Epiphanius’ Ancoratus 11  
John Voelker  
Marius Victorinus’ Use of a Gnostic Commentary............................ 21  
Tomasz StĘPieŃ  
Action of Will and Generation of the Son in Extant Works of Euno-  
mius ..................................................................................................... 29  
Alberto J. Quiroga Puertas  
‘In the Gardens of Adonis’. Religious Disputations in Julian’s Caesars 37  
Ariane Magny  
Porphyry and Julian on Christians...................................................... 47  
Jeannette KreiJkes  
The Impact of Theological Concepts on Calvin’s Reception of  
Chrysostom’s Exegesis of Galatians 4:21-6...................................... 57  
Hellen Dayton  
John Chrysostom on katanuxis as the Source of Spiritual Healing... 65  
Michaela Durst  
The Epistle to the Hebrews in the 7th Oration of John Chrysostom’s  
Orationes Adversus Judaeos............................................................... 71  
Paschalis Gkortsilas  
The Lives of Others: Pagan and Christian Role Models in John Chry-  
sostom’s Thought ................................................................................ 83  
Malouine De Dieuleveult  
Lexégèse de la faute de David (2Règnes 11-12) : Jean Chrysostome  
et Théodoret de Cyr............................................................................. 95  
Table of Contents  
37  
Matteo Caruso  
Hagiographic Style of the Vita Spyridonis between Rhetoric and  
Exegetical Tradition: Analogies between John Chrysostom’s Homilies  
and the Work of Theodore of Paphos................................................. 103  
Paul C. Boles  
Method and Meaning in Chrysostom’s Homily 7 and Origen’s  
Homily 1 on Genesis........................................................................... 111  
Susan B. GriFFith  
Apostolic Authority and the ‘Incident at Antioch’: Chrysostom on  
Gal. 2:11-4 .......................................................................................... 117  
James D. Cook  
Therapeutic Preaching: The Use of Medical Imagery in the Sermons  
of John Chrysostom............................................................................. 127  
Demetrios Bathrellos  
Sola gratia? Sola fide? Law, Grace, Faith, and Works in John  
Chrysostom’s Commentary on Romans.............................................. 133  
Marie-Eve Geiger  
Les homélies de Jean Chrysostome In principium Actorum: le titre  
pris comme principe exégétique ......................................................... 147  
Pierre Augustin  
Quelques sources Parisiennes du Chrysostome de Sir Henry Savile. 157  
Thomas Brauch  
The Emperor Theodosius I and the Nicene Faith: A Brief History .. 175  
Sergey Kim  
Severian of Gabala as a Witness to Life at the Imperial Court in  
Fifth-Century Constantinople.............................................................. 189  
FROM THE FIFTH CENTURY ONWARDS  
(GREEK WRITERS)  
Austin Dominic Litke  
The ‘Organon Concept’ in the Christology of Cyril of Alexandria .. 207  
Barbara Villani  
Some Remarks on the Textual Tradition and the Literary Genre of  
Cyril of Alexandria’s De adoratione et cultu in spiritu et veritate ... 215  
38  
Table of Contents  
Sandra leuenBerger-wenger  
All Cyrillians? Cyril of Alexandria as Norm of Orthodoxy at the  
Council of Chalcedon.......................................................................... 225  
Hans van loon  
Virtue in Cyril of Alexandria’s Festal Letters ................................... 237  
George Kalantzis  
Passibility, Tentability, and the Divine Οὐσία in the Debate between  
Cyril and Nestorius ............................................................................. 249  
James E. Goehring  
‘Talking Back’ in Pachomian Hagiography: Theodore’s Catechesis  
and the Letter of Ammon..................................................................... 257  
James F. Wellington  
Let God Arise: The Divine Warrior Motif in Theodoret of Cyrrhus’  
Commentary on Psalm 67................................................................... 265  
Agnès Lorrain  
Exégèse et argumentation scripturaire chez Théodoret de Cyr:  
l’In Romanos, écho des controverses trinitaires et christologiques des  
IVe et Ve siècles................................................................................... 273  
Kathryn kleinkoPF  
A Landscape of Bodies: Exploring the Role of Ascetics in Theodoret’s  
Historia Religiosa................................................................................ 283  
Maya GolDBerg  
New Syriac Edition and Translation of Theodore of Mopsuestia’s  
Reconstructed Commentary on Paul’s Minor Epistles: Fragments  
Collected from MS (olim) Diyarbakir 22........................................... 293  
Georgiana Huian  
The Spiritual Experience in Diadochus of Photike ............................ 301  
Eirini A. Artemi  
The Comparison of the Triadological Teaching of Isidore of Pelusium  
with Cyril of Alexandria’s Teaching .................................................. 309  
Madalina Toca  
Isidore of Pelusium’s Letters to Didymus the Blind.......................... 325  
Table of Contents  
39  
Michael Muthreich  
Ein äthiopisches Fragment der dem Dionysius Areopagita zuge-  
schriebenen Narratio de vita sua........................................................ 333  
István Perczel  
Theodoret of Cyrrhus: The Main Source of Pseudo-Dionysius’  
Christology?........................................................................................ 351  
Panagiotis G. Pavlos  
Aptitude (Ἐπιτηδειότης) and the Foundations of Participation in the  
Philosophy of Dionysius the Areopagite ............................................ 377  
Joost van rossum  
The Relationship between Dionysius the Areopagite and Maximus  
the Confessor: Revisiting the Problem............................................... 397  
Dimitrios A. Vasilakis  
Dionysius versus Proclus on Undefiled Providence and its Byzantine  
Echoes in Nicholas of Methone.......................................................... 407  
José María nieva  
The Mystical Sense of the Aesthetic Experience in Dionysius the  
Areopagite ........................................................................................... 419  
Ernesto Sergio MainolDi  
Why Dionysius the Areopagite? The Invention of the First Father .. 425  
Alexandru PreliPcean  
The Influence of Romanos the Melodist on the Great Canon of Saint  
Andrew of Crete: Some Remarks about Christological Typologies.. 441  
Alexis Torrance  
‘Assuming our nature corrupted by sin’: Revisiting Theodore the  
Studite on the Humanity of Christ...................................................... 451  
Scott ABles  
The Rhetoric of Persuasion in the Polemic of John of Damascus..... 457  
James A. Francis  
Ancient Seeing/Christian Seeing: The Old and the New in John of  
Damascus............................................................................................. 469  
Zachary Keith  
The Problem of ἐνυπόστατον in John Damascene: Why Is Jesus Not  
a Human Person? ................................................................................ 477  
40  
Table of Contents  
Nicholas BamForD  
Being, Christian Gnosis, and Deified Becoming in the Theoretikon’  
.
485  
Alexandros Chouliaras  
The Imago Trinitatis in St Symeon the New Theologian and Niketas  
Stethatos: Is this the Basic Source of St Gregory Palamas’ own  
Approach? ........................................................................................... 493  
GREGORY PALAMAS’ EPISTULA III  
(ed. Katharina Heyden)  
Katharina HeyDen  
Introduction: The Two Versions of Palamas’ Epistula III to Akindynos 507  
Katharina HeyDen  
The Two Epistulae III of Palamas to Akindynos: The Small but  
Important Difference between Authenticity and Originality.............. 511  
Theodoros AlexoPoulos  
The Problem of the Distinction between Essence and Energies in the  
Hesychast Controversy. Saint Gregory Palamas’ Epistula III: The  
Version Published by P. Chrestou in Light of Palamas’ Other Works  
on the Divine Energies........................................................................ 521  
Renate Burri  
The Textual Transmission of Palamas’ Epistula III to Akindynos:  
The Case of Monac. gr. 223 ............................................................... 535  
Dimitrios Moschos  
Reasons of Being versus Uncreated Energies – Neoplatonism and  
Mathematics as Means of Participating in God according to Nice-  
phorus Gregoras .................................................................................. 547  
Volume 23  
STUDIA PATRISTICA XCVII  
FROM THE FOURTH CENTURY ONWARDS  
(LATIN WRITERS)  
Anthony P. Coleman  
Comparing Institutes: Lactantius’ Divinae Institutiones in Calvin’s  
Institutio christianae religionis 1.1-5..................................................  
3
Table of Contents  
41  
Jessica van t westeinDe  
Jerome and the Christianus Perfectus, a Transformed Roman Noble  
Man?.................................................................................................... 17  
Silvia Georgieva  
Domina, Filia, Conserva, Germanа: The Identity of the Correspondent  
in Saint Jerome’s Letters..................................................................... 37  
Roberta Franchi  
Muliercularum socii (Hier., Ep. 133,4): donne ed eresia nell’Epistolario  
di Gerolamo......................................................................................... 51  
Richard Seagraves  
Prudentius: Contra orationem Symmachi, Bk. I ................................ 63  
Klazina staat  
‘Let him thus be a Hippolytus’ (Perist. 11.87): Horror and Rhetoric  
in Prudentius’ Peristephanon 11......................................................... 79  
Diane Shane Fruchtman  
Witness and Imitation in the Writings of Paulinus of Nola............... 87  
Lorenzo SciaJno  
Salvation behind the Web (Paul. Nol., Carm. XVI 93-148): Connec-  
tions and Echoes of a Fairy-tale Theme in Late Antiquity and the  
Middle Ages between West and East ................................................. 97  
Ewa Dusik-kruPa  
Politician, Theologian, Tutor. Luciferi Calaritanis’ Use of Holy  
Scripture............................................................................................... 103  
Vincenzo Messana  
Massimino ariano e la Sicilia: il dibattito storiografico negli ultimi  
decenni su una vexata quaestio........................................................... 115  
Salvatore Costanza  
Il variegato panorama di accezioni dei termini Romanus e barbarus,  
Christianus e paganus negli scritti di Salviano.................................. 129  
Matthew J. Pereira  
The Intertextual Tradition of Prosper’s De vocatione omnium gen-  
tium...................................................................................................... 143  
42  
Table of Contents  
raúl villegas marÍn  
Abjuring Manichaeism in Ostrogothic Rome and Provence: The  
Commonitorium quomodo sit agendum cum Manichaeis and the  
Prosperi anathematismi ...................................................................... 159  
Mantė lenkaitytĖ ostermann  
John Cassian Read by Eucherius of Lyon: Affinities and Diver-  
gences .................................................................................................. 169  
Daniel G. OPPerwall  
Obedience and Communal Authority in John Cassian....................... 183  
Gerben F. wartena  
Epic Emotions: Narratorial Involvement in Sedulius’ Carmen  
Paschale............................................................................................... 193  
Tim Denecker  
Evaluations of Multilingual Competence in Cassiodorus’ Variae and  
Institutiones ......................................................................................... 203  
Hector scerri  
On Menstruation, Marital Intercourse and ‘Wet Dreams’ in a Letter  
by Gregory the Great........................................................................... 211  
Jerzy SzaFranowski  
To See with Body and to See with Mind: Corporeal and Spiritual  
Cognition in the ‘Dialogues’ of Gregory the Great............................ 219  
Pere maymÓ i caPDevila  
Chants, Icons, and Relics in the Evangelization Doctrine of Gregory  
the Great: The Case of Kent............................................................... 225  
Stephen BlackwooD  
Scriptural Allusions and the Wholeness of Wisdom in Boethius’  
Consolation of Philosophy .................................................................. 237  
Juan Antonio JimÉnez sÁnchez  
A Brief Catalogue of Superstitions in Chapter 16 of Martin of Bra-  
ga’s De correctione rusticorum .......................................................... 245  
Alberto Ferreiro  
Sufficit septem diebus’: Seven Days Mourning the Dead in the Let-  
ters of St. Braulio of Zaragoza ........................................................... 255  
Table of Contents  
43  
Susan Cremin  
Bede’s Interpretative Practice in his Homilies on the Gospels.......... 265  
NACHLEBEN  
Bronwen neil  
Reception of Late-Antique Popes in the Medieval Byzantine Tradi-  
tion....................................................................................................... 283  
Ken Parry  
Providence, Resurrection, and Restoration in Byzantine Thought,  
Eighth to Ninth Centuries ................................................................... 295  
Eiji Hisamatsu  
Spätbyzantinische Übernahme der Vorstellung von der Lichtvision  
des Euagrios Pontikos, erörtert am Beispiel des Gregorios Sinaites . 305  
Catherine Kavanagh  
Eriugena’s Trinity: A Framework for Intercultural and Interreligious  
Dialogue............................................................................................... 311  
Tobias Georges  
The Apophthegmata Patrum in the Context of the Occidental Refor-  
mation of Monastic Life during the 11th and 12th Centuries. The Case  
of Peter Abelard .................................................................................. 323  
Christopher M. woJtulewicz  
Augustine and the Dissolution of Polarity. Some Thoughts on Augus-  
tine Reception in the Late 13th and Early 14th Centuries According  
to Thomas Aquinas and Meister Eckhart ........................................... 329  
Marie-Anne Vannier  
Origen, a Source of Meister Eckhart’s Thinking ............................... 345  
Lavinia Cerioni  
The Patristic Sources of Eriugena’s Exegesis of the Parable of the  
Bridesmaids ......................................................................................... 355  
Thomas F. Heyne  
A Polemicist rather than a Patrologist: Calvin’s Attitude to and Use  
of the Early Church Fathers................................................................ 367  
44  
Table of Contents  
Volume 24  
STUDIA PATRISTICA XCVIII  
ST AUGUSTINE AND HIS OPPONENTS  
Susanna Elm  
Sold to Sin Through Origo: Augustine of Hippo and the Late Roman  
Slave Trade..........................................................................................  
1
Michael J. Thate  
Augustine and the Economics of Libido ............................................ 23  
Willemien Otten  
The Fate of Augustine’s Genesis Exegesis in Medieval Hexaemeral  
Commentaries: The Cases of John Scottus Eriugena and Robert  
Grosseteste........................................................................................... 51  
Midori E. Hartman  
Beginning Again, Becoming Animal: Augustine’s Theology, Ani-  
mality, and Physical Pain in Genesis.................................................. 71  
Sarah stewart-kroeker  
Groaning with the Psalms: The Cultivation of World-Weariness in  
Augustine’s Enarrationes in Psalmos................................................. 81  
Marie Pauliat  
Non inueni tantam fidem in Israel: la péricope de l’acte de foi du  
centurion (Matt. 8:5-13) interprétée dans les Sermones in Matthaeum  
d’Augustin d’Hippone ......................................................................... 91  
Joseph L. GraBau  
Christology and Exegesis in Augustine of Hippo’s XVth Tractate  
In Iohannis Euangelium ...................................................................... 103  
Teppei Kato  
Greek or Hebrew? Augustine and Jerome on Biblical Translation... 109  
Rebekka schirner  
Augustine’s Theory of Signs – A Hermeneutical Key to his Practice  
of Dealing with Different Biblical Versions? .................................... 121  
Erika KiDD  
The Drama of De magistro................................................................. 133  
Table of Contents  
45  
Douglas Finn  
The Holy Spirit and the Church in the Earliest Augustine: An Analysis  
of the Character of Monnica in the Cassiciacum Dialogues.............. 141  
John Peter Kenney  
Nondum me esse: Augustine’s Early Ontology.................................. 167  
Maureen A. tilley  
Pseudo-Cyprian and the Rebaptism Controversy in Africa ............... 173  
Heather Barkman  
‘Stubborn and Insolent’ or ‘Enfeebled by Riches’? The Construction  
of Crispina’s Identity........................................................................... 181  
David E. wilhite  
Were the ‘Donatists’ a National or Social Movement in Disguise?  
Reframing the Question ...................................................................... 191  
Naoki Kamimura  
The Relation of the Identity of North African Christians to the Spir-  
itual Training in the Letters of Augustine .......................................... 221  
Edward Arthur Naumann  
The Damnation of Baptized Infants according to Augustine............. 239  
Jane merDinger  
Defying Donatism Subtly: Augustine’s and Aurelius’ Liturgical  
Canons at the Council of Hippo ......................................................... 273  
Marius Anton van willigen  
Did Augustine Change or Broaden his Perspective on Baptism? ..... 287  
Jesse A. Hoover  
‘They Agreed with the Followers of Arius’: The ‘Arianization’ of the  
Donatist Church in Late Antique Heresiology ................................... 295  
Joshua M. Bruce  
The Necessities of Judgment: Augustine’s Juridical Response to the  
Donatists.............................................................................................. 307  
Carles Buenacasa PÉrez  
Why Suicides Instead of Martyrs? Augustine and the Persecution of  
Donatists.............................................................................................. 315  
46  
Table of Contents  
Colten Cheuk-Yin Yam  
Augustine’s Intention in Proceeding from ‘mens, notitia, amor’ to  
memoria, intellegentia, voluntas’ ...................................................... 327  
Robert Parks  
Augustine and Proba on the Renewed Union of Man and Woman in  
Christ’s Humanity and the Church ..................................................... 341  
Victor YuDin  
Augustine on Omnipotence versus Porphyry Based on Appropriation  
of Plato’s Timaeus 41ab...................................................................... 353  
Johanna rÁkos-zichy  
The Resurrection Body in Augustine.................................................. 373  
Pierre Descotes  
Une demande d’intercession bien maladroite : la correspondance  
entre Augustin d’Hippone et Nectarius .............................................. 385  
Giulio Malavasi  
John of Jerusalem’s Profession of Faith (CPG 3621) and the Pelagian  
Controversy ......................................................................................... 399  
Katherine chamBers  
The Meaning of ‘Good Works’ in Augustine’s Anti-Pelagian Writings 409  
Kenneth M. Wilson  
Re-dating Augustine’s Ad Simplicianum 1.2 to the Pelagian Contro-  
versy..................................................................................................... 431  
Nozomu YamaDa  
Pelagius’ Narrative Techniques, their Rhetorical Influences and Neg-  
ative Responses from Opponents Concerning the Acts of the Synod  
of Diospolis ......................................................................................... 451  
Piotr M. Paciorek  
The Controversy between Augustine and Julian of Eclanum: On  
Law and Grace .................................................................................... 463  
Timo Nisula  
‘This Three-Headed Hellhound’ – Evil Desire as the Root (radix) of  
All Sins in Augustine’s Sermons........................................................ 483  
Table of Contents  
47  
Jonathan Martin Ciraulo  
Sacramental Hermeneutics: Augustine’s De doctrina Christiana in  
the Berengarian Controversy............................................................... 495  
Elizabeth klein  
The Silent Word: Speech in the Confessions..................................... 509  
Christian CoPPa  
The Creatureliness of Time and the Goodness of Narrative in Augus-  
tine’s Confessions................................................................................ 517  
D.L. DusenBury  
New Light on Time in Augustine’s Confessions................................ 529  
Math OsseForth  
Augustine’s Confessions: A Discourse Analysis ............................... 545  
Sean Hannan  
Demonic Historiography and the Historical Sublime in Augustine’s  
City of God .......................................................................................... 553  
Jimmy Chan  
The Restoration Word Group in De civitate Dei, Books XI-XXII:  
A Study of an Important Backbone of Augustine’s Theology of His-  
tory....................................................................................................... 561  
Michael L. Carreker  
Sapientia as Dialectic in Book XV of Augustine’s De Trinitate....... 569  
Augustine M. reisenauer  
Wonder and Significance in Augustine’s Theology of Miracles....... 577  
Makiko Sato  
Confession of a Human Being as Darkness in Augustine ................. 589  
Rowena Pailing  
Does Death Sting? Some Thoughts from the Mature Augustine ...... 599  
Kitty Bouwman  
Wisdom Christology in the Works of St. Augustine.......................... 607  
Mark G. Vaillancourt  
The Predestinarian Gottschalk of Orbais: Faithful Augustinian or  
Heretic?: The Ninth Century Carolingian Debate Revisited............. 621  
48  
Table of Contents  
Matthew Drever  
Speaking from the Depths: Augustine and Luther’s Christological  
Reading of Substantia in Psalm 69..................................................... 629  
Cassandra M.M. Casias  
The Vulnerable Slave-Owner in Augustine’s Sermons...................... 641  
Kyle Hurley  
Kenoticism in The Brothers Karamazov and Confessions: Descending  
to Ascend............................................................................................. 653  
Elizabeth A. Clark  
Augustine and American Professors in the Nineteenth and Early  
Twentieth Centuries: From Adulation to Critique............................. 667  
Shane M. Owens  
Christoecclesial Participation: Augustine, Zizioulas, and Contemporary  
Ecumenism .......................................................................................... 675  
Dongsun Cho  
The Eternal Relational Submission of the Son to the Father: A Critical  
Reading of a Contemporary Evangelical Trinitarian Controversy on  
Augustine............................................................................................. 683