During the 20th century, the patristic scholarship was only able to address the political thought of John Chrysostom in a piecemeal fashion. The present study constitutes the first systematic attempt to remedy this situation by providing a more all-encompassing view of the great Church Father’s thinking about public life in Christian antiquity. Its first part is devoted to Chrysostom’s perception of the relationship between Church and state. His view of his time’s central state authority, the Roman Empire, is carefully reconstructed from select passages in his homiletic corpus. Particular care is taken to highlight the substantial differences between John Chrysostom and Eusebius of Caesarea insofar as their attitude toward the Roman Εmpire is concerned; these differences become visible primarily in the way that the two ecclesiastical authors make use of the motif of “synchronic parallelism,” that is to say, the temporal coincidence of Jesus’ birth with Octavius Augustus’ autocracy and the spread of the Pax Romana thro throughout the entire Mediterranean world.

ID: 1122
Oblast:
Autor

Izdavač

Broj strana

192

Godina izdanja

2020