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E-raamat: Irenaeus of Lyons and the Mosaic of Christ: Preaching Scripture in the Era of Martyrdom

(Concordia Theological Seminary, USA)
  • Formaat: EPUB+DRM
  • Ilmumisaeg: 21-Apr-2017
  • Kirjastus: Routledge
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781351846189
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  • Formaat: EPUB+DRM
  • Ilmumisaeg: 21-Apr-2017
  • Kirjastus: Routledge
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781351846189

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Recent theological scholarship has shown increasing interest in patristic exegesis. The way early Christians read scripture has attracted not only historians, but also systematic and exegetical scholars. However, the Christian reading of scripture before Origen has been neglected or, more often, dominated by Gnostic perspectives. This study uses the writings of Irenaeus to argue that there was a rich Christian engagement with scripture long before Origen and the supposed conflict between Antioch and Alexandria.

This is a focused examination of specific exegetical themes that undergird Irenaeus’ argument against his opponents. However, whereas many works interpret Irenaeus only as he relates to certain Gnostic teachings, this book recognizes the broader context of the second century and explores the profound questions facing early Christians in an era of martyrdom. It shows that Irenaeus is interested, not simply in expounding the original intent of individual texts, but in demonstrating how individual texts fit into the one catholic narrative of salvation. This in turn, he hopes, will cause his audience to see their place as individuals in the same narrative.

Using insightful close reading of Irenaeus, allied with a firm grounding in the context in which he wrote, this book will be vital reading for scholars of the early Church as well as those with interests in patristics and the development of Christian exegesis.

Acknowledgments xi
Abbreviations xiii
1 Reading scripture in an age of martyrdom
1(18)
Why Irenaeus and the second century?
1(4)
Martyrdom: the context for Irenaeus' work
5(14)
Martyrdom and the disharmony of the world
6(4)
Martyrdom and the early Christian catechumenate
10(9)
2 Creatio ex nihilo and the freedom of humanity
19(32)
Creating all things ex nihilo
20(7)
Creation and freedom in ancient philosophy
21(2)
Apologists and the two-step theory of creation
23(2)
Valentinian cosmology: exploiting the two-step theory
25(2)
Irenaeus: renovating the creatio ex nihilo doctrine
27(5)
God contains all things
27(2)
God needs no instruments
29(2)
God's will as the substance of all things
31(1)
Creatio ex nihilo as the foundation for freedom
32(11)
The freedom of God
33(3)
The freedom of humanity
36(1)
Human freedom in AH iv, 37-38
37(6)
Conclusion
43(8)
3 The recapitulation of all things in Christ
51(30)
Martyrdom and the question of Christian identity
51(2)
Recapitulation all things in Christ
53(10)
The origins of recapitulation: Logos-Christology
54(4)
Recapitulation as the fulfillment of creation
58(5)
Christ's recapitulation of humanity
63(5)
Recapitulation and the ontological freedom of humanity
68(3)
Conclusion: recapitulation as a way of reading scripture
71(10)
4 The mosaic of Christ (AH i, 8-9, iv, 33-34): reading scripture within the Eucharistic gathering
81(26)
Human flesh as the sacred text of divine revelation
81(1)
The aesthetic character of the divine image
82(2)
The Valentinian reading of scripture: images without an archetype
84(2)
The formation of the flesh as the hypothesis of scripture
86(5)
Finding stability: The archetype becomes visible
91(3)
The Eucharistic flesh of Christ as the stability of scripture
94(5)
Fixing the flesh to the wood: Irenaeus 'reading of Isaiah 2:3--4
99(8)
5 The virgin birth (AH iii): a new kind of generation
107(26)
Second-century readers: relating the new to the old
107(3)
Irenaeus 'fourfold gospel
110(5)
The virgin birth: confessing Christ (AH iii, 16)
115(3)
The virgin birth: a new generation (AH iii, 19)
118(4)
The virgin birth: an ancient sign (AH iii, 21--22)
122(11)
6 The new fulfilling the old (AH iv)
133(20)
Irenaeus 'reading of the Old Testament: introducing AH iv
133(1)
The patriarchs: Abraham's joy (AH iv, 5--7)
134(5)
Love's fulfilling of the law (AH iv, 9--13)
139(14)
7 Power made perfect in weakness (AH v)
153(24)
The battle for the apostle Paul
153(5)
The man born blind: weakness and the formation of humanity (AH v, 15)
158(7)
Jesus' temptation: weakness and the economy of the tree (AH v, 16--21)
165(12)
8 Conclusion: "Joining the end to the beginning"
177(22)
Irenaeus and his opponents: what have we learned?
177(5)
Tradition: the truth that is handed over
178(2)
Ontology: a new ground of being
180(2)
Irenaeus 'reading of scripture: what have we learned?
182(5)
The scriptures and the cosmological narrative
183(2)
The scriptures and the preaching of the church
185(2)
Characteristics of Irenaeus 'exegesis
187(12)
Preaching the text
187(1)
Ontological meaning
188(2)
Joining the end to the beginning
190(9)
Index 199
James G. Bushur is Director of Deaconess Formation and associate professor of Historical Theology at Concordia Theological Seminary, USA. He has published widely on Patristics and the early Christian Church and has been an ordained minister for over 20 years.