Essays on patristic biblical interpretation and doctrine, written by a renowned historical theologian
Brian E. Daley, SJ, is a highly acclaimed scholar of early Christian theology. In a prolific career spanning more than forty years, he has published his research in a wide range of academic journals and edited collections; this book represents the first time that several of his studies of patristic biblical interpretation and doctrine have been brought together in one volume.
The eighteen essays in this collection examine topics including patristic exegesis, Origen’s De principiis, Cappadocian scriptural interpretation and doctrine, early Christian views on redemption and eschatology, and modern retrievals of patristic scriptural interpretation. This informative and insightful volume is an essential resource for theologians, exegetes interested in the history of interpretation, and theological libraries.
Table of Contents
Introduction by Brian Dunkle, SJ
Part 1: Fundamental Issues in Scriptural Interpretation and Doctrine
1. Christ, the Church, and the Shape of Scripture: What We Can Learn from Patristic Exegesis
2. Is Patristic Exegesis Still Usable? Reflections on Early Christian Interpretation of the Psalms
3. “In Many and Various Ways”: Toward a Theology of Theological Exegesis
4. Woman of Many Names: Mary in Orthodox and Catholic Theology
Part 2: Origen’s Scriptural Interpretation and Doctrine
5. Origen’s De principiis: A Guide to the Principles of Christian Scriptural Interpretation
6. Incorporeality and “Divine Sensibility”: The Importance of De principiis 4.4 for Origen’s Theology
Part 3: Cappadocian Scriptural Interpretation and Doctrine
7. Walking through the Word of God: Gregory of Nazianzus as a Biblical Interpreter
8. Systematic Theology in Homeric Dress: Gregory Nazianzen’s Poemata arcana
9. Training for the “Good Ascent”: Gregory of Nyssa’s Homily on the Sixth Psalm
10. Growth toward Final Freedom: Gregory of Nyssa on Death and Eternal Life
Part 4: Theological Method in the Sixth Century
11. Boethius’s Theological Tracts and Early Byzantine Scholasticism
12. The Origenism of Leontius of Byzantium
Part 5: Scriptural Interpretation of Redemption and Eschatology
13. “He Himself Is Our Peace” (Eph 2:14): Early Christian Views of Redemption in Christ
14. The Ripening of Salvation: Hope for Resurrection in the Early Church
15. Apokatastasis and “Honorable Silence” in the Eschatology of Maximus the Confessor
Part 6: Modern Retrievals of Patristic Scriptural Interpretation
16. Newman and the Alexandrian Tradition: The “Veil of the Letter” and the Person of Christ
17. The Nouvelle Théologie and the Patristic Revival: Sources, Symbols, and the Science of Theology
18. Knowing God in History and in the Church: Dei Verbum and “Nouvelle Théologie”
Acknowledgments
Brian E. Daley, SJ, is Catherine F. Huisking Professor of Theology Emeritus at the University of Notre Dame. In recognition of his significant scholarship, he has been awarded the Johannes Quasten Medal and the Ratzinger Prize for Theology. Daley’s books include The Hope of the Early Church, God Visible, and Christology in Early Christianity.