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Clement of Alexandria

2000
An assessment of Clement of Alexandria as a Christian philosopher of late antiquity.
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Philo and Clement of Alexandria

2022
AbstractThis essay studies Clement and Philo as authors in a common Alexandrian tradition who anticipate the negative theology of Dionysius. The first section on transcendence and immanence argues that, while Philo and Clement both exemplify the practice of describing God through negatives which is characteristic of the middle Platonists, Clement goes ...
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The Hellenism of Clement of Alexandria

The Classical Quarterly, 1931
In seeking to understand the development of philosophy in later antiquity it is important to take account of Clement of Alexandria, perhaps the first Christian writer to be greatly influenced by the systems of Greece. Accordingly in this article certain aspects of Clement's doctrine will be selected for examination where his obligations to the ...
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The Achievement of Clement of Alexandria

Religious Studies, 1976
In his masterly book Christ and Culture H. Richard Niebuhr identified five main attitudes which Christians have taken towards secular culture. The first emphasizes the opposition between Christ and culture. In the New Testament it is best seen in Revelation (where it is complicated by a situation of persecution) and in the First Epistle of John. But it
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Clement of Alexandria

2005
Clement of Alexandria (150–215) lived and taught in the most lively intellectual centre of his day. This book offers a comprehensive account of how he joined the ideas of the New Testament to those of Plato and other classical thinkers. Clement taught that God was active from the beginning to the end of human history and that a Christian life should ...
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Clement of Alexandria and the Jews

Scottish Journal of Theology, 1998
Did Justin Martyr really have a conversation with Trypho the Jew as he states that he did in hisDialogue with Trypho?And even if he did not, does this text, indirectly at least, give evidence of genuine contact between Christians and Jews? When Tertullian in hisAdversus Judaeosreviled Jews for their failure to understand the scriptures in the way he ...
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The Jews in Clement of Alexandria

While the anti-Jewish rhetoric of several other second-century Christian authors is both apparent and well-attested, Clement of Alexandria’s (c. 150–215 CE) stance toward contemporary Judaism is considerably more difficult to gauge, since he barely mentions Jews and avoids making a point out of other authors’ anti-Judaism even when quoting it.
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