Description
The Antirrheticus is a neglected work, and this is the first English translation to be published. It has had a poor reputation among many modern scholars. Gregory is accused of being prolix and repetitive and of having misrepresented or misunderstood many of Apolinarius's Christological ideas. It is argued here that the work is nevertheless of considerable theological interest. It is able in fact successfully to identify the principal problems raised by Apolinarius's central concept ofChrist as an "enfleshed mind," and also provides an essential insight into Gregory's own Christology and soteriology.
The translation is interweaved with a commentary to provide the reader with some guidance through the complexities of Gregory's arguments. The introduction includes an overview of the history of Apollinarianism and discusses the extent to which it is possible to reconstruct, from the fragments quoted by Gregory, the arguments of Apolinarius's Apodeixis to which he is responding. It also examines the background to and the chronology of both of Gregory's anti-Apollinarian works, and looks critically at the arguments that they deploy.
About the Author
Robin Orton graduated in classics at Oxford University, UK and, after a career in the British civil service, studied patristics at Heythrop College, University of London, UK and at King's College, London, UK.
Book Information
ISBN 9780813228075
Author Robin Orton
Format Hardback
Page Count 288
Imprint The Catholic University of America Press
Publisher The Catholic University of America Press
Weight(grams) 532g