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15 - THEODORE OF MOPSUESTIA AS REPRESENTATIVE OF THE ANTIOCHENE SCHOOL

from V - THE BIBLE IN THE EARLY CHURCH

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 March 2008

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Summary

Fourth-century Antioch was an outstanding centre of biblical scholarship and of ecclesiastical confusion. The former was not the primary cause of the latter, but the two were not wholly unconnected. Both characteristics were already features of the Antiochene scene in the third century. Paul of Samosata, bishop of Antioch in A.D. 268, was the first bishop to be excommunicated and deposed by a Church Council for unorthodoxy—and the first to defy that ban by staying on in possession of the Church's buildings until turned out by the civil authorities. Lucian, a presbyter at Antioch in the years after Paul's deposition, was probably the most learned biblical scholar (apart from Origen) in the whole history of the Church before Nicaea. Yet we know comparatively little of either of these men, for one was regarded as a heretic of heretics in his own right and the other as tarred with the same brush at one remove in his capacity as the supposed father of Arianism.

The leading figures of the Antiochene school of biblical scholarship in the fourth century were staunch upholders of the faith of Nicaea. Yet they probably stand much closer in approach to Paul and to Lucian than they would ever have been prepared to admit. There is the same emphasis on the biblical text, on historical fact and on the humanity of Jesus, which we can already detect in the scanty and biased accounts of Paul and Lucian. And it was the same feature of their fundamental approach—their beginning from below, their stress on the human aspect—which got them into trouble also with later standards of orthodoxy.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 1970

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References

Devreesse, R., Essai sur Théodore de Mopsueste (Vatican, 1948). [Especially for the Old Testament.]
Devreesse, R., Le Commentaire de Théodore de Mopsueste sur les Psaumes (I–LXXX) (Studi e Testi 93, Vatican, 1939).
Greer, R. A., Theodore of Mopsuestia (London, 1961). [Especially for John.]
Pirot, L., L'Œuvre Exégétique de Théodore de Mopsueste (Rome, 1913).
Swete, H. B., ‘Theodorus of Mopsuestia’, in Smith, W. and Wace, H., Dictionary of Christian Biography, IV (London, 1887). [Especially for Paul.]Google Scholar
Swete, H. B., Theodori Episcopi Mopsuesteni in Epistolas B. Pauli Commentarii (2 vols., Cambridge, 1880–2). Greek fragments in Staab, K., Pauluskom-mentare aus der griechischen Kirche (Neutestamentliche Abhandlungen XV, Münster, 1933).Google Scholar
Vosté, J. M., Theodori Mopsuesteni Commentarius in Evangelium Johannis Apostoli (Corpus Scriptorum Christianorum Orientalium: Scriptores Syri, Series 4, Tomus III; Louvain, 1940). Greek fragments in Devreesse, R., Essai….Google Scholar
Wickert, U., Studien zu den Pauluskommentaren Theodors von Mopsuestia (Berlin, 1962).

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