Theology and Economy ‘after’ Barth
Abstract The relation of theology and economy is a perennial theological challenge. Many contemporary theologians' understanding of this challenge is shaped by Karl Barth's attempt to resolve a set of tensions problematising this relation inherited from figures like Kant and Feuerbach.
Jared Michelson
wiley +1 more source
The fourth-century historian Eusebius, bishop of Caesarea, lived during the anti-Christian persecutions of the Roman emperor Maximinus Daia and believed fervently that Jesus Christ would imminently return to alleviate the suffering of God’s people.
Mario Baghos
doaj +1 more source
Christian ideology and the image of a holy land: the place of Jerusalem pilgrimage in the various Christianities [PDF]
The great majority of the world's holy cities and sacred shrines attract pilgrims from culturally circumscribed catchment areas, and thus host pilgrims united by strong degrees of cultural homogeneity.
Bowman, Glenn W.
core
A Letter that Killeth: Gregory of Nyssa on How (Not) to Read Scripture, Platonically
Abstract In this essay, I explore the emergence of multicolumn Bibles in late antiquity, with a particular emphasis on Origen's Hexapla and its use by Gregory of Nyssa. I contextualise Gregory's use of multicolumn Bibles within the Origenian tradition and show that, in this intellectual context, multicolumn Bibles functioned as hermeneutical rather ...
ISIDOROS C. KATSOS
wiley +1 more source
On the Origins of the Alexandrian School: Rhizomes, Episcopal Legitimation, and a Tale of Two Cities
This article revisits an important and much-discussed question: how and why was Christian learning in second- and third-century Alexandria institutionalised, leading to what came to be known as the “Catechetical School”?
Chrysovalantis Kyriacou
doaj +1 more source
La « thalassocratie » : mythes et réalité historique (à propos de « la liste d’Eusèbe »)
The « List of Thalassocracies » in Eusebius is the subject of learned debates for more than one century. Two currents of thought emerge: the proponents of a strange document without great historical value and those who wanted to prove at all costs its ...
Claude Baurain
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The Missionary Activity of St. Peter Outside Palestine in the Light of the New Testament Literature
From the historical works of Eusebius of Caesarea we learn that St. Peter went to Rome in 42 and preached the Gospel there for 25 years. However, this information is not confirmed in the books of the New Testament.
Franciszek Mickiewicz
doaj +1 more source
Roundtable on Michael J. Hollerich, Making Christian History: Eusebius of Caesarea and His Readers (Oakland: University of California Press, 2021) – CORRIGENDUM [PDF]
Andrea Sterk
openalex +1 more source
Celem artykułu jest porównanie dwóch narracji teologicznych – zawartych w Epistula ad Caesarienses Euzebiusza z Cezarei i De decretis Nicaenae synodi Atanazego Aleksandryjskiego – prezentujących orzeczenia Soboru Nicejskiego i mających na celu ...
Pavel Dudzik
doaj +1 more source
Codex Sinaiticus as a Window into Early Christian Worship [PDF]
Codex Sinaiticus is the oldest and most complete New Testament in Greek known to exist. Its two colophons at the end of 2 Esdras and Esther indicate a possible connection with Pamphilus’ famous library at Caesarea in Palestine.
Mitchell, Timothy N
core +2 more sources

