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The Fourth Century Greek Fathers as Exegetes1

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  23 August 2011

W. Telfer
Affiliation:
Langton, Upper St. Ann's Road, Faversham, Kent, England

Extract

Not long ago, an English New Testament teacher was pressed by a Russian theologian for a straight answer to the question, “Do you teach your students to interpret the New Testament according to the Fathers?” The answer could hardly be Yes. In most Western Universities it would be rare to find references to patristic exegesis in lectures on the Old or New Testaments. So a chasm was disclosed between academic theology as it is understood in the Eastern Orthodox world and its counterpart in the West. It is as big a chasm as any that gapes, doctrinally or ecclesiastically, between the Western Christian denominations and the various branches of the Eastern Church. For the Orthodox, patristic exegesis affords a sure safeguard of right Christian belief, so that the task of the academic theologian is to teach that exegesis. He is not so readily concerned about the primary meaning of the text of Scripture; that is to say, about the meaning it had in the minds of the writers, and that they looked for it to have for their immediate readers. Dr. Zankov, speaking for the Greek Orthodox Church, says, “The Holy Scriptures serve us as a source. The liturgical books, and writings of the Church Fathers, are, so to speak, the rule and line of ecclesiastical consciousness. In both of these the heart and spirit of Orthodoxy are reflected.” This Orthodox concept of Scripture has roots that run back to the first days of Greek Christianity.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © President and Fellows of Harvard College 1957

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References

2 Zankov, S.. The Eastern Orthodox Church (trans. Lowrie, A., S.C.M. Press. 1929)Google Scholar.

3 The words of this summary are taken from the Canon of 1571 directing the content of the preaching of Anglican clergy. The Church of England then stood closer to the Easterns in this matter.

4 E. M. Buytaert, Études sur Eusebe d'Emèse, Discours conservés en Latin, Collection de Troyes. Louvain, 1953. M. Spanneut's book was published at Lille in 1948.

5 See Chase, F. H., Chrysostom, a study in the history of Biblical interpretation. Cambridge, 1887, pp. 4147Google Scholar.

6 Hom, in Stat., viii. 6.

7 Hom, in Stat., xix. 9.

8 Hom. LXXXVI in Johannem.

9 Lecture IV. 27.