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Auteur D. H. Williams |
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A Catechetical Address on the Nicene Creed? / D. H. Williams in Harvard Theological Review, 104/2 (April 2011)
[article]
Titre : A Catechetical Address on the Nicene Creed? Type de document : texte imprimé Auteurs : D. H. Williams, Auteur Année de publication : 2011 Article en page(s) : pp. 217-232. Langues : Anglais (eng) Résumé : The anonymous “Incipit fides Nicaena” is a unique, though much ignored, Latin text from the later fourth century. Its only critical edition, from a sole ninth century codex, was first prepared in 1913 by Cuthbert H. Turner, under the title of Commentarius in Symbolum Nicaeanum. Turner's version was reprinted in the first volume of the Patrologiae Latinae Supplementum (1958). There has been almost no further scholarly work done on this text since Turner's edition, nor has it been translated into any European language. As a result, no questions have been asked about the bearing of this work on post-Nicene doctrinal history as our understanding of the Nicene-“Arian” conflicts has been reformulated over the last two decades. In this essay, I want to address this gap in our understanding, although it must be said that there are more questions than answers raised by the existence of this small document. Specifically, we will see how this unique text sheds light on the theological influence that the Nicene Creed began to have in western churches in the second half of the fourth century. An attempt will also be made to demonstrate how this primitive explanation of the Creed offers an indication of its own approximate date and context.
in Harvard Theological Review > 104/2 (April 2011) . - pp. 217-232.[article] A Catechetical Address on the Nicene Creed? [texte imprimé] / D. H. Williams, Auteur . - 2011 . - pp. 217-232.
Langues : Anglais (eng)
in Harvard Theological Review > 104/2 (April 2011) . - pp. 217-232.
Résumé : The anonymous “Incipit fides Nicaena” is a unique, though much ignored, Latin text from the later fourth century. Its only critical edition, from a sole ninth century codex, was first prepared in 1913 by Cuthbert H. Turner, under the title of Commentarius in Symbolum Nicaeanum. Turner's version was reprinted in the first volume of the Patrologiae Latinae Supplementum (1958). There has been almost no further scholarly work done on this text since Turner's edition, nor has it been translated into any European language. As a result, no questions have been asked about the bearing of this work on post-Nicene doctrinal history as our understanding of the Nicene-“Arian” conflicts has been reformulated over the last two decades. In this essay, I want to address this gap in our understanding, although it must be said that there are more questions than answers raised by the existence of this small document. Specifically, we will see how this unique text sheds light on the theological influence that the Nicene Creed began to have in western churches in the second half of the fourth century. An attempt will also be made to demonstrate how this primitive explanation of the Creed offers an indication of its own approximate date and context. Monarchianism and Photinus of Sirmium as the Persistent Heretical Face of the Fourth Century / D. H. Williams in Harvard Theological Review, 99/2 (April 2006)
[article]
Titre : Monarchianism and Photinus of Sirmium as the Persistent Heretical Face of the Fourth Century Type de document : texte imprimé Auteurs : D. H. Williams, Auteur Année de publication : 2007 Article en page(s) : pp. 187-206. Langues : Anglais (eng) Résumé : The Psychomachia of the fifth-century Latin poet Prudentius provides a straight-forward portrait of heresy generally shared in the west: The wolf, with gory jaws, conceals himself in a soft fleece, Counterfeiting milk-white sheep while carrying on bloody murders by devouring lambs.It is by this means that Photinus and Arrius disguise themselves, those wolves so wild and savage.
in Harvard Theological Review > 99/2 (April 2006) . - pp. 187-206.[article] Monarchianism and Photinus of Sirmium as the Persistent Heretical Face of the Fourth Century [texte imprimé] / D. H. Williams, Auteur . - 2007 . - pp. 187-206.
Langues : Anglais (eng)
in Harvard Theological Review > 99/2 (April 2006) . - pp. 187-206.
Résumé : The Psychomachia of the fifth-century Latin poet Prudentius provides a straight-forward portrait of heresy generally shared in the west: The wolf, with gory jaws, conceals himself in a soft fleece, Counterfeiting milk-white sheep while carrying on bloody murders by devouring lambs.It is by this means that Photinus and Arrius disguise themselves, those wolves so wild and savage.