Defending and Defining the Faith: An Introduction to Early Christian Apologetic Literature
Autor D. H. Williamsen Limba Engleză Hardback – 24 iul 2020
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780190620509
ISBN-10: 0190620501
Pagini: 484
Dimensiuni: 236 x 160 x 36 mm
Greutate: 0.84 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States
ISBN-10: 0190620501
Pagini: 484
Dimensiuni: 236 x 160 x 36 mm
Greutate: 0.84 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States
Recenzii
Williams consistently demonstrates a comprehensive understanding of both the various contexts in which the apologists wrote as well as critical issues related to the apologies themselves. Williams should be commended for producing a resource that all scholars writing on the early Christian apologists will be eager to consult in the course of their own research.
It will occupy an important place in libraries and private collections for years to come.
Defending and defining the faith will serve as a longstanding resource for experts in early Christianity, scholars interested in pagan-Christian relations during late antiquity, church historians curious about the significance of early Christian apologetics and, finally, those interested in the pairing of sensible historiography with careful attention to the lived faith of religious communities.
Highly useful for students beginning to explore the topic of early Christian apologetics and the arguments and counter-arguments that were employed then and still sometimes surface today.
I believe Williams's endeavor is both necessary and important, and I learned much from his discussion of Justin Martyr in particular.
...with this meticulous analysis he makes a unique contribution to an underexamined aspect of the genre...Highly recommended. Upper-division undergraduates through faculty.
This is the first general introduction to Apologies and Apologetic Literature in the English Language since a long time. Readers will find in the book a lot of information and a first approach to ancient texts, secondary literature and context. The rich world of those texts should be more discovered and Daniel Williams offers a kind of map for journeys in an extremely rich landscape. Defending the Faith is a project of Christianity also in Late Antiquity, the book do not cover the Apologists of the Pre-Constantine Aera.
This book is unique: a survey of early Christian apologetic writing that covers all major figures in the period! Williams's insightful and always reliable erudition is a joy to read and will benefit generations of scholars and students seeking to understand this constant theme in early Christian writing. Theologians, Classicists, and Historians will all find this book an immense boon.
This volume does not confine itself to texts of a particular type and period. It gives a full account of neglected but important works that followed the 'triumph' of Christianity, exploring the historical situations that at times might prompt the choice of historiography or political agitation as means of catching the reluctant pagan ear. Each chapter also provides an insightful and comprehensive guide to current debates in scholarship.
In this sweeping exploration of early Christian apologetics -- indeed magisterial in its breadth -- D.H. Williams expands our sense of Christianity's engagement with the larger non-Christian culture well beyond the traditional study of apologetics, which focuses on the pre-Constantinian era. In this way also he challenges contemporary theologians to rethink the place of apologetics beyond the Barthian critique of Schleiermacher and von Harnack's fears of cultural syncretism.
The writings by early Christian authors that were purportedly addressed to outsiders present a notoriously diverse body of literature, provoking a wide range of general and of specific questions regarding how they are to be understood within their historical contexts. In its range and clarity Defending and Defining the Faith fills a serious gap as it guides its readers through the debates and through the writings themselves, and makes its own contribution to locating them within wider discussion of the formation of a Christian identity.
This volume seeks to provide a contextualized overview of early Christian texts that fit the qualifications of an apology, while noting the difficulties in defining the categories of both "apology" and 'apologist" and aiming to honor both the continuities and discontinuities that lie between the various authors across the centuries.
It will occupy an important place in libraries and private collections for years to come.
Defending and defining the faith will serve as a longstanding resource for experts in early Christianity, scholars interested in pagan-Christian relations during late antiquity, church historians curious about the significance of early Christian apologetics and, finally, those interested in the pairing of sensible historiography with careful attention to the lived faith of religious communities.
Highly useful for students beginning to explore the topic of early Christian apologetics and the arguments and counter-arguments that were employed then and still sometimes surface today.
I believe Williams's endeavor is both necessary and important, and I learned much from his discussion of Justin Martyr in particular.
...with this meticulous analysis he makes a unique contribution to an underexamined aspect of the genre...Highly recommended. Upper-division undergraduates through faculty.
This is the first general introduction to Apologies and Apologetic Literature in the English Language since a long time. Readers will find in the book a lot of information and a first approach to ancient texts, secondary literature and context. The rich world of those texts should be more discovered and Daniel Williams offers a kind of map for journeys in an extremely rich landscape. Defending the Faith is a project of Christianity also in Late Antiquity, the book do not cover the Apologists of the Pre-Constantine Aera.
This book is unique: a survey of early Christian apologetic writing that covers all major figures in the period! Williams's insightful and always reliable erudition is a joy to read and will benefit generations of scholars and students seeking to understand this constant theme in early Christian writing. Theologians, Classicists, and Historians will all find this book an immense boon.
This volume does not confine itself to texts of a particular type and period. It gives a full account of neglected but important works that followed the 'triumph' of Christianity, exploring the historical situations that at times might prompt the choice of historiography or political agitation as means of catching the reluctant pagan ear. Each chapter also provides an insightful and comprehensive guide to current debates in scholarship.
In this sweeping exploration of early Christian apologetics -- indeed magisterial in its breadth -- D.H. Williams expands our sense of Christianity's engagement with the larger non-Christian culture well beyond the traditional study of apologetics, which focuses on the pre-Constantinian era. In this way also he challenges contemporary theologians to rethink the place of apologetics beyond the Barthian critique of Schleiermacher and von Harnack's fears of cultural syncretism.
The writings by early Christian authors that were purportedly addressed to outsiders present a notoriously diverse body of literature, provoking a wide range of general and of specific questions regarding how they are to be understood within their historical contexts. In its range and clarity Defending and Defining the Faith fills a serious gap as it guides its readers through the debates and through the writings themselves, and makes its own contribution to locating them within wider discussion of the formation of a Christian identity.
This volume seeks to provide a contextualized overview of early Christian texts that fit the qualifications of an apology, while noting the difficulties in defining the categories of both "apology" and 'apologist" and aiming to honor both the continuities and discontinuities that lie between the various authors across the centuries.
Notă biografică
D. H. Williams is Professor of Patristics and Historical Theology in the Departments of Religion and Classics, Baylor University. Ph.D. 1991 University of Toronto; Th.M. 1985 Princeton Theological Seminary. Williams specializes in early Christian literature and theology, ancient Roman religions, the history of doctrine; the fourth century Trinitarian controversies and ancient Christianity in China.