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The transmission of sin / Pier Franco Beatrice
Titre : The transmission of sin : Augustine and his sources Type de document : texte imprimé Auteurs : Pier Franco Beatrice, Auteur ; Adam Kamesar, Traducteur Editeur : New York : Oxford university press Année de publication : 2013 Collection : AAR religion in translation Importance : xii-299 p. Format : 24 cm ISBN/ISSN/EAN : 978-0-19-975141-9 Note générale : Includes bibliographical references and indexes Langues : Anglais (eng) Langues originales : Italien (ita) Mots-clés : Péché Index. décimale : 233 Résumé : "Originally published in Italian in 1978, The Transmission of Sin is a study of the origins of the doctrine of original sin, one of the most important teachings of the Catholic Church. While the doctrine has a basis in biblical sources, it found its classic expression in the work of St. Augustine. Yet Augustine did not work out his theory on the basis of the biblical texts alone, rather he sought to understand them in the context of the religious thinking of his own time. Pier Franco Beatrice's work seeks to illuminate that context, and discover the post-biblical influences on Augustine's thought. Although he made considerable efforts to defend and elaborate the doctrine of hereditary guilt, says Beatrice, the doctrine already existed before Augustine and was in fact widespread in the Christianity of the time, particularly in the West. He locates its origins in Egypt in the second half of the second century CE, in Jewish-Christian circles that saw sexual congress as the source of the physical and moral corruption that afflicts all humans. In reaction to this extreme view, which rejected marriage and procreation as inherently evil, other theologians developed a more moderate position, recognizing only personal sin, which could not be inherited. Beatrice argues that Augustine's doctrine exemplified a synthesis of these two trends which would ultimately triumph as the orthodox Catholic position."--Publisher's website Note de contenu : Preface to the English Edition --
Translator's Note --Part I
The Doctrine of Original Sin in Its Augustinian FormulationChapter 1
The Pelagian Critique of the Doctrine of Original Sin --Chapter 2
Original Sin and Its Consequences --Chapter 3
The Essence and Transmission of Original Sin --Chapter 4
Infant Baptism and Original Sin --Part II
The Biblical and Patristic Tradition according to AugustineChapter 5
The Biblical Testimonia --Chapter 6
Sin and Death in the Theology of Paul --Chapter 7
Augustine and Ambrosiaster --Chapter 8
Ambrose and Cyprian, Masters of Augustine --Chapter 9
Chrysostom, Augustine, and the Pelagians --Part III
The Origin and Development of the 'Augustinian' Doctrine of Original SinChapter 10
The 'Legacy of Adam' in Greek Theology from the Second to the Fourth Century --Chapter 11
The Encratite Origin of the 'Augustinian' Doctrine of Original Sin --Chapter 12
The Concept of Original Sin as Popular and Manichean Heresy --Chapter 13
Traducianism, Original Sin, and Infant Baptism in the West --Chapter 14
Rome and Carthage: Two Traditions Compared --
Conclusion: Towards a New History of the Augustinian Doctrine of Original Sin --
Bibliography --
Supplement to the Bibliography (2011).The transmission of sin : Augustine and his sources [texte imprimé] / Pier Franco Beatrice, Auteur ; Adam Kamesar, Traducteur . - New York : Oxford university press, 2013 . - xii-299 p. ; 24 cm. - (AAR religion in translation) .
ISBN : 978-0-19-975141-9
Includes bibliographical references and indexes
Langues : Anglais (eng) Langues originales : Italien (ita)
Mots-clés : Péché Index. décimale : 233 Résumé : "Originally published in Italian in 1978, The Transmission of Sin is a study of the origins of the doctrine of original sin, one of the most important teachings of the Catholic Church. While the doctrine has a basis in biblical sources, it found its classic expression in the work of St. Augustine. Yet Augustine did not work out his theory on the basis of the biblical texts alone, rather he sought to understand them in the context of the religious thinking of his own time. Pier Franco Beatrice's work seeks to illuminate that context, and discover the post-biblical influences on Augustine's thought. Although he made considerable efforts to defend and elaborate the doctrine of hereditary guilt, says Beatrice, the doctrine already existed before Augustine and was in fact widespread in the Christianity of the time, particularly in the West. He locates its origins in Egypt in the second half of the second century CE, in Jewish-Christian circles that saw sexual congress as the source of the physical and moral corruption that afflicts all humans. In reaction to this extreme view, which rejected marriage and procreation as inherently evil, other theologians developed a more moderate position, recognizing only personal sin, which could not be inherited. Beatrice argues that Augustine's doctrine exemplified a synthesis of these two trends which would ultimately triumph as the orthodox Catholic position."--Publisher's website Note de contenu : Preface to the English Edition --
Translator's Note --Part I
The Doctrine of Original Sin in Its Augustinian FormulationChapter 1
The Pelagian Critique of the Doctrine of Original Sin --Chapter 2
Original Sin and Its Consequences --Chapter 3
The Essence and Transmission of Original Sin --Chapter 4
Infant Baptism and Original Sin --Part II
The Biblical and Patristic Tradition according to AugustineChapter 5
The Biblical Testimonia --Chapter 6
Sin and Death in the Theology of Paul --Chapter 7
Augustine and Ambrosiaster --Chapter 8
Ambrose and Cyprian, Masters of Augustine --Chapter 9
Chrysostom, Augustine, and the Pelagians --Part III
The Origin and Development of the 'Augustinian' Doctrine of Original SinChapter 10
The 'Legacy of Adam' in Greek Theology from the Second to the Fourth Century --Chapter 11
The Encratite Origin of the 'Augustinian' Doctrine of Original Sin --Chapter 12
The Concept of Original Sin as Popular and Manichean Heresy --Chapter 13
Traducianism, Original Sin, and Infant Baptism in the West --Chapter 14
Rome and Carthage: Two Traditions Compared --
Conclusion: Towards a New History of the Augustinian Doctrine of Original Sin --
Bibliography --
Supplement to the Bibliography (2011).Exemplaires (1)
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