Synopses & Reviews
There are special times of movement in the history of ideas, and one such time - as the author of this study shows - was the second half of the second century, when Christian thought showed fresh vigour. By concentrating on five seminal Christian thinkers of the second century (Justin, Athenegoras, Irenaeus, Clement of Alexandria, and Tertullian), Eric Osborn illustrates how it was that Christianity made monotheism axiomatic to its central doctrinal claims while adapting, too, to the peculiar circumstances in which it developed. The stimulus for new thought came from the objections of the state, philosophers, Jews, Gnostics, and Marcion, who in different ways denied the Christian claim to faith in one God. In response, Christian thinkers argued for one God who was the first principle of being, goodness, and truth. In its presentation of the lively beginning which brought Christianity and classical thought together, this book casts light on the growth of the European intellectual tradition.
Synopsis
This study - written by an expert in the field - casts new light on the ways Christianity made monotheism axiomatic to its doctrinal claims.
Synopsis
By concentrating on five seminal Christian thinkers of the second century (Justin, Athenegoras, Irenaeus, Clement of Alexandria and Tertullian) the author of this study casts new light on the lively beginning which brought Christianity and classical thought together.
Table of Contents
1. One God: questions and opposition; 2. The One and the Mind; 3. The Bible as the material of theology; 4. One God as Cause and Father; 5. The unity of all things in Christ; 6. One God in a new way: by the Son and Spirit; 7. One Good; 8. One Mind, Truth, and Logic; Conclusion; Appendices; Select bibliography.