Pagans and Christians in the Late Roman Empire

New Evidence, New Approaches (4th-8th centuries)

Marianne Sághy and Edward M. Schoolman, Budapest: CEU Press, 2017

Description

Do the terms ‘pagan’ and ‘Christian,’ ‘transition from paganism to Christianity’ still hold as explanatory devices to apply to the political, religious and cultural transformation experienced Empire-wise? Revisiting ‘pagans’ and ‘Christians’ in Late Antiquity has been a fertile site of scholarship in recent years: the paradigm shift in the interpretation of the relations between ‘pagans’ and ‘Christians’ replaced the old ‘conflict model’ with a subtler, complex approach and triggered the upsurge of new explanatory models such as multiculturalism, cohabitation, cooperation, identity, or group cohesion. This collection of essays, inscribes itself into the revisionist discussion of pagan-Christian relations over a broad territory and time-span, the Roman Empire from the fourth to the eighth century. A set of papers argues that if ‘paganism’ had never been fully extirpated or denied by the multiethnic educated elite that managed the Roman Empire, ‘Christianity’ came to be presented by the same elite as providing a way for a wider group of people to combine true philosophy and right religion. The speed with which this happened is just as remarkable as the long persistence of paganism after the sea-change of the fourth century that made Christianity the official religion of the State. For a long time afterwards, ‘pagans’ and ‘Christians’ lived ‘in between’ polytheistic and monotheist traditions and disputed Classical and non-Classical legacies.

(Text from the publisher)

Table of contents

Marianne Sághy – Edward M. Schoolman, Introduction

LIVES
Maël Goarzin, The Importance of the Practical Life for Pagan and Christian Philosophers 
Linda Honey, Religious Profiling in the Miracles of Saint Thecla
Margarita Vallejo-Girvés, Empress Verina among the Pagans 
Anna Judit Tóth, John Lydus, Pagan and Christian 
Juana Torres, Marcus of Arethusa, Heretic and Martyr 

IDENTITIES
Monika Pesthy Simon, Imitatio Christi? Classical and Scriptural Literary Models of Martyrdom in Early Christianity 
Levente Nagy, Ascetic Christianity in Pannonian Martyr Stories? 
Jérôme Lagouanère, Uses and Meanings of ‘Paganus‘ in the works of Saint Augustine 
Ecaterina Lung, Religious Identity as seen by Historians and Chroniclers in the Sixth Century

CULTS
Branka Migotti, The cult of Sol Invictus and early Christianity in Aquae Iasae
Miriam Adan Jones, Conversion as Convergence: Gregory the Great confronting Pagan and Jewish Influences in Anglo-Saxon Christianity
Edward M. Schoolman, Religious Images and Contexts: “Christian” and “Pagan” Terracotta Lamps 

LANDSCAPES
Hristo Preshlenov, Believers in Transition: from Paganism to Christianity along the Southwestern Black Sea Coast (4th_6th centuries) 
Jozef Grzywaczewski – Daniel K. Knox, Glory, Decay and Hope: Goddess Roma in Sidonius Apollinaris’ Panegyrics 
Luciana Gabriela Soares Santoprete, Tracing the Connections between “Mainstream” Platonism and “Marginal” Platonism with Digital Tools

TOMBS
Ivan Basić, Pagan Tomb to Christian Church: The Case of Diocletian’s Mausoleum in Spalatum 
Olivér Gábor – Zsuzsa Katona Győr, Sopianae Revisited: Pagan or Christian Burials?
Elizabeth O’Brien, Impact beyond the Empire: Burial practices in Ireland (4th – 8th centuries)

Link

https://ceupress.com/book/pagans-and-christians-late-roman-empire-0

Studies in Interreligious Dialogue

Leuven: Peeters

Description

Studies in Interreligious Dialogue is an academic peer-reviewed journal. It welcomes scholarly works on encounters between believers of different religions and worldviews from a practice-theory point of view. It invites discussion of practical issues concerning interreligious relations, such as interreligious learning, worship, marriage, welfare. The journal publishes articles by adherents of various religious traditions and academic disciplines. In particular, Studies in Interreligious Dialogue aims to enhance practical religious studies as a new field in the academic study of religion.

Studies in Interreligious Dialogue is abstracted and indexed in ATLASerials; Index Theologicus; Index to the Study of Religions Online; New Testament Abstracts; Elenchus Bibliographicus (Ephemerides Theologicae Lovanienses); ERIH PLUS (European Reference Index for the Humanities and Social Sciences); Scopus; CrossRef.

Studies in Interreligious Dialogue is a peer-reviewed journal.

(Text by the editors)

Link

http://poj.peeters-leuven.be/content.php?url=journal&journal_code=SID

The Early Christian World

Philip F. Esler (ed), London: Routledge, 2017

Description

Since its publication in 2000, The Early Christian World has come to be regarded by scholars, students and the general reader as one of the most informative and accessible works in English on the origins, development, character and major figures of early Christianity. In this new edition, the strengths of the first edition are retained. These include the book’s attractive architecture that initially takes a reader through the context and historical development of early Christianity; the essays in critical areas such as community formation, everyday experience, the intellectual and artistic heritage, and external and internal challenges; and the profiles on the most influential early Christian figures. The book also preserves its strong stress on the social reality of early Christianity and continues its distinctive use of hundreds of illustrations and maps to bring that world to life. Yet the years that have passed since the first edition was published have seen great advances made in our understanding of early Christianity in its world. This new edition fully reflects these developments and provides the reader with authoritative, lively and up-to-date access to the early Christian world. A quarter of the text is entirely new and the remaining essays have all been carefully revised and updated by their authors. Some of the new material relates to Christian culture (including book culture, canonical and non-canonical scriptures, saints and hagiography, and translation across cultures). But there are also new essays on: Jewish and Christian interaction in the early centuries; ritual; the New Testament in Roman Britain; Manichaeism; Pachomius the Great and Gregory of Nyssa. This new edition will serve its readers for many years to come.

(Text from the publisher)

Table of contents

Dedication

List of Illustrations

Preface

List of Abbreviations

I THE CONTEXT

1.The Mediterranean Context of Early Christianity – Philip F. Esler

2.Emperors, Armies and Bureaucrats 68-430 CE – Jill Harries

3.Greek and Roman Philosophy and Religion – Luther Martin

4.Jewish Tradition and Culture – James Aitken

II CHRISTIAN ORIGINS AND DEVELOPMENT

5.Jesus in His World – Douglas Oakman

6.Early Jewish Christianity – Edwin Broadhead

7.Paul and the Development of Gentile Christianity – Todd Klutz

8.The Jesus Tradition: The Gospel Writers’ Strategies of Persuasion – Richard Rohrbaugh

9.The Second and Third Centuries – Jeffrey S. Siker

10.From Constantine to Theodosius and Beyond – Bill Leadbetter

11.Jewish and Christian Interaction from the First to the Fifth Centuries – Anders Runesson

III COMMUNITY FORMATION AND MAINTENANCE

12.Mission and Expansion – Thomas Finn

13.The Development of Office in the Early Church – Mark Edwards

14.Christian Regional Diversity – David Taylor

15.Monasticism – Columba Stewart

IV EVERYDAY CHRISTIAN EXPERIENCE

16.Reading the New Testament in Roman Britain – Richard Cleaves

17.Sex and Sexual Renunciation I – Teresa Shaw

18.Sex and Sexual Renunciation II: Developments in Research since 2000 – Elizabeth Castelli

19.Women, Children and House Churches – Mona LaFosse

20.Worship, Practice and Belief – Max Johnson

21.Ritual and the Rise of the Early Christian Movement – Risto Uro

22.Communication and Travel – Blake Leyerle

V CHRISTIAN CULTURE

23.Christian Realia: Books, Papyri and Artefacts – Giovanni Bazzana

24.Scriptures in Early Christianity – Outi Lehtipuu and Hanne von Weissenberg

25.Saints and Hagiography – Mark Humphries

26.Translation and Communication across Languages – Malcolm Choat

VI THE INTELLECTUAL HERITAGE

27.The Apostolic Fathers – Carolyn Osiek

28.The Apologists – Anders-Christian Jacobsen

29.Early Theologians – Gerald Bray

30.Later Theologians of the Greek East – Andrew Louth

31.Later Theologians of the West – Ivor Davidson

32.Creeds, Councils and Doctrinal Development – Piotr Ashwin-Siejkowski

33.Biblical Interpretation – Oskar Skarsaune

VII THE ARTISTIC HERITAGE

34.Early Christian Architecture: The First Five Centures – L. Michael White

35. Art – Robin Jensen

36.Music – John Arthur Smith

37.Imaginative Literature – Richard Bauckham

VIII EXTERNAL CHALLENGES

38. Political Oppression and Martyrdom – Candida R. Moss

39. Graeco-Roman Philosophical Opposition – Michael Simmons

40. Popular Graeco-Roman Responses to Christianity – Craig de Vos

IX INTERNAL CHALLENGES

41.Internal Renewal and Dissent in the Early Christian World – Sheila McGinn

42.Gnosticism – Alistair Logan

43.Montanism – Christine Trevett

44.Donatism – Jakob Engberg

45.Arianism – David Rankin

46.Manichaeism – Jason BeDuhn

X PROFILES

47.Origen – Thomas Scheck

48.Tertullian – Geoffrey D. Dunn

49.Perpetua and Felicitas – Shira L. Lander and Ross S. Kraemer

50.Constantine – Bill Leadbetter

51.Antony the Great – Columba Stewart

52.Pachomius the Great – James E. Goehring

53.Athanasius – David Gwynn

54.John Chrysostom – Wendy Mayer and Pauline Allen

55.Gregory of Nyssa – Elena Ene D-Vasilescu

56.Jerome – Dennis Brown

57.Ambrose – Ivor Davidson

58.Augustine – Carol Harrison

59.Ephrem the Syrian – Kathleen McVey

60.Julian the Apostate – Michael Bland Simmons

Link

https://www.routledge.com/The-Early-Christian-World/Esler/p/book/9781032199344

Christianity at the Crossroads

How The Second Century Shaped The Future Of The Church

Michael J Kruger, Westmont: InterVarsity Press, 2017

 Description

It is the second century. Everyone who knew Jesus is now dead. Christianity has begun to spread, but there are serious threats to its survival. Christianity at the Crossroads examines the crucial issues that faced the second-century Church – a period often neglected or overlooked in other studies. It was during this period that the fledgling Church struggled to work out its identity and stay true to the vision of Christ and the apostles. Threatened by divisive controversies from within and fierce persecution from without, the Church’s response to these and other issues not only determined its survival; it was to shape the beliefs, values and lives of millions of Christians throughout the world over the next two millennia.

(Text from the publisher)

Table of contents

Preface

List of abbreviations

Introduction – What is so important about the second century?

1 – A peculiar identity: The sociological make-up of second-century Christianity

2 – A strange superstition: The political and intellectual acceptability of second-century Christianity

3 – Worshipping Jesus: The ecclesiological structure of second-century Christianity

4 – Alternative pathways: Diversity in second-century Christianity

5 – The Great Church: Unity in second-century Christianity

6 – A textual culture: The literature of second-century Christianity

7 – A new Scripture: The new Testament canon in second-century Christianity

Conclusion

Link

https://www.ivpress.com/christianity-at-the-crossroads

The Routledge Guidebook to The New Testament

Patrick Gray, London: Routledge, 2017

Description

As part of the Christian canon of scripture, the New Testament is one of the most influential works in history. Its impact can be seen in many different fields, but without an awareness of the historical, cultural, social, and intellectual context of early Christianity, it can be difficult for modern-day readers to fully understand what the first-century authors were trying to say and how the first readers of the New Testament would have understood these ideas. The Routledge Guidebook to the New Testament offers an academic introduction to the New Testament examining:

  • The social and historical context in which the New Testament was written
  • The primary text, supporting students in close analysis from a range of consensus positions
  • The contemporary reception and ongoing influence of the New Testament

With further reading suggestions, this guidebook is essential reading for all students of religion and philosophy, and all those wishing to engage with this important work.

(Text from the publisher)

Table of contents

Abbreviations

Introduction

I. The Context of Early Christianity and the New Testament

II. The Literature of the New Testament: The Gospels and the Acts of the Apostles

Mark

Matthew

Luke-Acts

John

III. The Literature of the New Testament: Letters

The Letters of Paul

Romans

1 Corinthians

2 Corinthians

Galatians

Ephesians

Philippians

Colossians

1-2 Thessalonians

The Pastoral Epistles (1-2 Timothy, Titus)

Philemon

The Letter to the Hebrews

The General Epistles

James

1-2 Peter

1, 2, 3 John

Jude

IV. The Literature of the New Testament: Apocalyptic Literature

Revelation

V. Key Concepts

VI. General Issues

What do we know about the life of Jesus?

What language did Jesus speak?

How do we know what Jesus really said?

How should the miracles in the New Testament be understood?

Did Jesus found a new religion?

Is the New Testament anti-Semitic?

Who wrote the New Testament?

How do we know when the books of the New Testament were written?

Why does the New Testament contain (only) twenty-seven books?

How should one read the non-canonical writings?

How are the Dead Sea Scrolls related to the New Testament?

Should the New Testament be read « literally »?

What special methods do scholars use to interpret the New Testament?

VII. For Further Study

Bibliography

Index

Link

https://www.routledge.com/The-Routledge-Guidebook-to-The-New-Testament/Gray/p/book/9780415729048

The Spiritual Tradition in Eastern Christianity

Ascetic Psychology, Mystical Experience, and Physical Practices

Bradford D.T., Leuven: Peeters, 2016

Description

The Spiritual Tradition in Eastern Christianity is a comprehensive survey of the means, goals, and motivations of the ascetic life as represented in texts spanning the fourth and the nineteenth century. Contemporary examples are also included. The main themes are the dynamics of the soul, the disabling effects of the passions, mental and physical ascetism, the desirable condition of dispassion, and the experience of deification. A variety of topics are addressed, including hesychast prayer, religious weeping, the spiritual senses, dream interpretation, luminous visions, the holy ‘fool’, ascetic demonology, and pain in ascetic practice. Typical ascetic and mystical experiences are interpreted from the psychological and the neuroscientific perspective. Comparative analyses based on Sufism, Vedantic mysticism, and especially early Buddhist psychology highlight distinctive features of the Christian ascetic life. Major figures such as Evagrius Ponticus, Maximos the Confessor, Isaac the Syrian, and Symeon the New Theologian receive extensive individual consideration.

(Text from the publisher)

Table of contents

Preface

Chapter 1 – The Powers of the Soul

1.1 The Incensive Power

1.2 The Desiring Power

1.3 The Intellect

1.4 Image and Archetype

1.5 Brightly Shining Mind

Chapter 2 – The Heart

2.1 Spiritual Anatomy

2.2 Hesychast Prayer

2.3 Four Phases of Prayer

2.4 Intracorporeal Space

2.5 Posture and Respiration

2.6 Attention

2.7 Two Patterns of Autonomic Arousal

2.8 Parallels in Other Traditions

2.9 The Influence of Sufism

Chapter 3 – The Luminous Presence

3.1 Properties of the Luminous Presence

3.2 The Hesychast Controversy

3.3 Divine and Demonic Visions

3.4 Four Kinds of Luminous Visions

3.5 Focal-Extracorporeal Light

3.6 Global-Extracorporeal Light

3.7 Corporeal Light

3.8 Intracorporeal Light

3.9 A Complex Visionary Experience

3.10 Chromatic Visionary Light

3.11 Visionary Light and Divine Omnipresence

Chapter 4 0 Sleep, Dreams, and Prayer

4.1 Prayer During Sleep

4.2 Sleep Deprivation

4.3 Dream Interpretation

4.4 Visions and Revelations While Asleep

4.5 Illustration of Prayer While Dreaming

4.6 Illustration of Mystical Experience While Asleep

4.7 Dreamless Sleep and Mystical Experience

Chapter 5 – The Spiritual Senses

5.1 Spiritual Perception

5.2 Sensory Perception

5.3 One and Many

5.4 Mystical Synesthesia

5.5 Spiritual Odor

5.6 Smell and Demonic Entrapment

Chapter 6 – The Passions

6.1 Eight Dispositions

6.2 The Five Hindrances

6.3 The Constructing Activities

6.4 The Demons

6.5 Anchorite and Cenobite

6.6 Psychotherapy of the Passions

6.7 Illustration of Evagrian Psychotherapy

6.8 Demons, Delirium, and Migraine

Chapter 7 – Stillness and Dispassion

7.1 The Delicacy of Stillness

7.2 Nipsis and Attention

7.3 Nipsis and Emotion

7.4 Nipsis and Memory

7.5 The Permanence of Dispassion

7.6 A Dispassionate ‘Fool’

Chapter 8 – Acedia

8.1 Depleted Fervor

8.2 Acedia and Physical Symptoms

Chapter 9 – Pride and Vainglory

9.1 Vainglory and Social Display

9.2 Clothing and Other Possessions

9.3 Vainglory and Cognition

9.4 A Psychosis of Pride and Vainglory

Chapter 10 – Fornication

10.1 Morbid Defluxions

10.2 Intoxication and Sexual Fantasy

10.3 Fornication and Sense-Desire

Chapter 11 – Gluttony

11.1 Diverse Expressions of Gluttony

11.2 Fasting

11.3 A Syndrome of Ascetic Fasting

11.4 The Precedence of Gluttony over Fornication

11.5 The Desire for Immortality

Chapter 12 – Physical Practices

12.1 Surface and Depth Interventions

12.2 Discomfort and Pain

12.3 The Prostration

12.4 Face, Eyes, and Gaze

Chapter 13 – Evagrius on Impassioned Mental Activity

13.1 Thoughts

13.2 Illustration of Objective Perception

Chapter 14 – Images of Bodily Corruption

14.1 The Buddhist Meditation on Foulness

14.2 The Ascetic Utility of Raw Emotion

Chapter 15 – Maximos on Impassioned Mental Activity

15.1 Conceptual Images

15.2 Illustration of Objective Perception

Chapter 16 – Religious Weeping

16.1 Tears

16.2 Weeping

16.3 Isaac the Syrian on Tears

16.4 Permanent Autonomic Change

Chapter 17 – The Body in Dreams and Fantasy

17.1 The Imaginal Body

17.2 A Principle of Mental Transformation

Chapter 18 – The Deified Body

18.1 The Flesh

18.2 Weightiness

18.3 Illusory Movement

18.4 Weightiness and Cosmology

Chapter 19 – The Remembrance of Death

19.1 Fear and Love

19.2 An Imaginal Practice

19.3 The Thought of Death

19.4 Change in the Practice

19.5 An Imitation of Christ

Chapter 20 – Three Forms of Mystical Experience

20.1 Near-Absorption

20.2 The Ecstatic Vision

20.3 The Imageless Grasp

20.4 Mystical Experience in Temporal Perspective

Chapter 21 – Maximos on Dispassion and Deification

21.1 Eros

21.2 Preliminary Dispassions

21.3 Advanced Dispassions

21.4 Inhibition of Perceptual Experience

21.5 Deification

References

Appendices

Appendix A: Sources and Terms

Appendix B: Ascetic Theologians

Appendix C: Biographical Chronology of Symeon the New Theologian

Appendix D: Visionary Mysticism in Symeon the New Theologian

Appendix E: Deification and Cognitive Inhibition in Maximos the Confessor

Index

Link

https://poj.peeters-leuven.be/content.php?url=issue&journal_code=SIS&issue=0&vol=26

The scriptural universe of ancient christianity

Guy G. Stroumsa, Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 2016

Description

The passage of texts from scroll to codex created a revolution in the religious life of late antiquity. It played a decisive role in the Roman Empire’s conversion to Christianity and eventually enabled the worldwide spread of Christian faith. The Scriptural Universe of Ancient Christianity describes how canonical scripture was established and how scriptural interpretation replaced blood sacrifice as the central element of religious ritual. Perhaps more than any other cause, Guy G. Stroumsa argues, the codex converted the Roman Empire from paganism to Christianity. The codex permitted a mode of religious transmission across vast geographical areas, as sacred texts and commentaries circulated in book translations within and beyond Roman borders. Although sacred books had existed in ancient societies, they were now invested with a new aura and a new role at the core of religious ceremony. Once the holy book became central to all aspects of religious experience, the floodgates were opened for Greek and Latin texts to be reimagined and repurposed as proto-Christian. Most early Christian theologians did not intend to erase Greek and Roman cultural traditions; they were content to selectively adopt the texts and traditions they deemed valuable and compatible with the new faith, such as Platonism. The new cultura christiana emerging in late antiquity would eventually become the backbone of European identity.

(Text from the publisher)

Table of contents

Introduction: A Double Paradigm Shift

1. A Scriptural Galaxy

2. A Divine Palimpsest

3. Religious Revolution and Cultural Change

4. Scripture and Culture

5. The New Self and Reading Practices

6. Communities of Knowledge

7. Eastern Wisdoms

8. A World Full of Letters

9. Scriptural and Personal Authority

Conclusion: Alexandria, Jerusalem, Baghdad

Notes

Acknowledgments

Link

https://www.hup.harvard.edu/catalog.php?isbn=9780674545137

Du Logos de Plotin au Logos de saint Jean

Vers la solution d’une problème métaphysique ?

Michel FATTAL, Paris: Les Editions du Cerf, « Cerf-Patrimoines », 2016

Description

Cette étude interroge et mesure la pertinence de la solution apportée par Plotin au problème métaphysique de la séparation (chôrismos) hérité de Platon. Les fonctions multiples attribuées par Plotin au Logos et aux logoi au sein de son système hiérarchisé, impliquant des niveaux différents de réalités, sont-elles en mesure de résoudre le problème de la séparation ontologique et cosmologique hérité du platonisme ? Ne peut-on pas adresser à Plotin le reproche qu’il fait à ses adversaires gnostiques qui multiplient inutilement les hypostases et les intermédiaires entre le monde intelligible et le monde sensible, et au sein même du monde intelligible ? On se demandera également si la réduction de ces logoi multiples à un seul Logos n’apporterait pas une solution à ce problème de la séparation rencontré par Plotin ? Le Christ-Médiateur, envisagé en tant que Logos par le Prologue de l’Evangile de Jean, n’est-il pas en d’autres termes en mesure de résoudre, à sa manière et différemment, ce problème de la séparation qui apparaît dans tout système philosophique et théologique induisant une forme de verticalité et de transcendance ? En quoi le recours au Logos du Prologue est-il légitime historiquement et philosophiquement pour apporter une solution au problème du chôrismos rencontré par Plotin ? Pourquoi Plotin ne fait-il pas mention du Logos johannique sachant que ce dernier offre pourtant des garanties d’unité et d’unicité, d’efficacité et de vitalité, de puissance de relation et de communication tant recherchée par le philosophe néoplatonicien ; et sachant que son disciple direct, Amélius, de l’école plotinienne à Rome, a lui-même eu le besoin de proposer une exégèse philosophique du Prologue ?

(Texte de la maison d’édition)

Lien

https://www.editionsducerf.fr/librairie/livre/17742/du-logos-de-plotin-au-logos-de-saint-jean

La mystique théorétique et théurgique dans l’Antiquité gréco-romaine

Judaïsmes et christianismes

S. Mimouni, M. Scopello (eds.), Turnout: Brepolis, 2016

Description

Dans ce volume sont publiés une partie des résultats d’un programme de recherche intitulé «Mystique théorétique et théurgique dans l’Antiquité gréco-romaine» et sous-titré «paganismes, judaïsmes, christianismes»: c’est dire sa diversité, son ouverture et sa portée dans un monde scientifique où le cloisonnement – sans doute rendu inévitable à cause de la variété des sources et concepts – des disciplines et des domaines devient de plus en plus préjudiciable à une perspective globalisante. Ainsi l’objet de ce projet a été de rendre compte non seulement des pratiques mystiques (rituelles ou cultuelles) mais aussi du versant spéculatif ou intellectuel de la mystique tel qu’on le trouve en œuvre, par exemple, dans la philosophie grecque.

(Texte de la maison d’édition)

Table de matières

Introduction générale – Simon C. Mimouni et Madeleine Scopello

« À l’image de dieu » et connaissance mystique – Pier Cesare Bori †

Partie I. Introductions méthodologiques et épistémologiques

Le problème de l’expérience mystique – François Trémolières

Gershom G. Scholem et les études sur le mysticisme et le messianisme dans le judaïsme : quelques remarques et réflexions – Simon C. Mimouni

Mystic Experience in Context. Representing Categories and Examining « social practices » – Adriana Destro

Le mysticisme intra-mondain : les effets sociaux du désir de Dieu – Enzo Pace

Mourir pour dieu ? Politique moderne et redemption – Myriam Revault d’Allonnes

Partie II. La mystique dans le judaïsme antique

Apocalypses juives et mystique : état des lieux et remarques de méthode – Christophe Nihan

A Literary Analysis of the Sefer Yetsirah – Rocco Bernasconi

Problèmes du mysticisme juif d’expression grecque : l’exemple des textes liturgiques – Pierluigi Lanfranchi

Was Jesus a « mystic »? – Mauro Pesce

La Mystique juive d’expression araméenne dans l’Évangile selon Jean – Folker Siegert

Paul le mystique : une subversion de l’expérience religieuse – Daniel Marguerat

Pierre, Thomas, Philippe, trois figures mystiques – Régis Burnet

La déroute militaire comme épreuve mystique : retour sur un passage du Règlement de la guerre, 1qm xvi, 11 – xvii, 9 – Christophe Batsch

Pratiques rituelles ou exégèse scripturaire ? Origines et nature de la mystique de la Merkavah – Pierluigi Piovanelli

La contribution des Cantiques de l’holocauste du sabbat à l’étude de la pensée mystique juive au tournant de l’ère chrétienne – David Hamidović

La Shekhina et le motif de la lumière : une mystique juive non rabbinique ? – José Costa

Prophétie et mystique chez Philon d’Alexandrie – Smaranda Marculescu Badilita

Partie III. La mystique dans le christianisme antique

Mystique de l’incarnation et mystique de l’initiation dans le Protreptique et le Pédagogue de Clément d’Alexandrie – Marie-Laure Chaieb

Du Mystère au mysticisme : Élaboration d’une mystique de la Parole dans les Stromates de Clément d’Alexandrie – Fabienne Jourdan

Le sens de la connaissance mystique chez Origène – Georges Skaltsas

Passion du Sauveur et imitation du Christ dans la gnose valentinienne – Jean-Daniel Dubois

L’Évangile selon Thomas est-il « mystique » ? – Paul-Hubert Poirier

Tendances mystiques dans quelques textes de la tradition thomasienne – Claudio Gianotto

« Tu as vu le père et tu deviendras père » (NH II 61, 31). Baptême et divinisation dans l’Évangile selon Philippe et les textes de Nag Hammadi – Louis Painchaud

L’âme en fuite : le traité gnostique de l’Allogène (NH XI, 3) et la mystique juive – Madeleine Scopello

Le parcours mystique de l’initié : le cas des Livres de Iéou du codex Bruce (MS Bruce 96) – Éric Crégheur

La vision de Dieu entre mystique théurgique et théorétique : le cas de Sérapion (Cassien, Conférences, X, 2-3) – Giovanni Filoramo

Lien

http://www.brepols.net/Pages/ShowProduct.aspx?prod_id=IS-9782503561882-1

Corpus Christianorum in Translation

Contre les manichéens – Titus de Bostra

P.-H. Poirier, A. Roman, T. Schmidt (eds.), Turnhout: Brepolis, 2015, 483 p.

Description

Rédigé en 363-364, le traité Contre les manichéens de Titus de Bostra est la plus importante réfutation chrétienne du manichéisme. Elle se distingue par sa composition en deux volets (réfutation rationnelle et réfutation scripturaire) et par la richesse de sa documentation (on y dénombre quelque 150 « citations manichéennes »). Préservé en grec aux deux-tiers et intégralement dans une version syriaque de la fin du IVe ou du début du Ve siècle, cet ouvrage est d’une importance capitale pour l’histoire de la théologie chrétienne ancienne et du manichéisme. Ce volume offre une double traduction française annotée du grec et du syriaque, la première dans une langue moderne, établie sur une base philologique sûre. L’édition critique gréco-syriaque et sa traduction française permettent désormais une nouvelle approche des sources manichéennes et de leur réfutation. Le texte qui a servi de base à cette traduction est celui qui a paru dans la Series Graeca du Corpus Christianorum comme Titus Bostrensis – Contra Manichaeos Libri IV (CCSG 82, 2013). Il s’agissait de la première édition critique synoptique intégrale des textes grec et syriaque de cette oeuvre, accompagnée d’une édition critique des extraits préservés en grec dans les Sacra Parallela de Jean Damascène.

(Texte de la maison d’édition)

Table de matières

Introduction

Titus de Bostra: Contre les manichéens

Traduction du texte syriaque et grec

De Titus, évêque, Contre les manichéens

Discours de Titus contre les manichéens

Deuxième discours de Titus contre les manichéens

Troisième discours contre les manichéens

Quatrième discours contre les manichéens

Lien

https://www.brepolsonline.net/action/showBook?doi=10.1484%2FM.CCT-EB.5.105902