Handbook of Patristic Exegesis (2 vols)
Biographical note
Charles Kannengiesser was Successor of the late Cardinal Jean Daniélou at the Institut Catholique, Paris, Catherine Huisking Professor of Historical Theology at Notre Dame University, Indiana (1982-92) and Fellow of the Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton, NJ. Since 1992 he is Professor at Concordia University, Montreal. He has published several books and many articles on Athanasius of Alexandria and the Alexandrian tradition.
Readership
Scholars and students of early christianity, biblical studies, historical theology, classical studies, ancient philosophy and hermeneutics.
Reviews
'This excellent research tool for biblical scholars and church historians contains exhaustive information about more than 150 Greek and Latin Church Fathers and their translations and interpretations of the Bible…An extensive, thorough, up-to-date international bibliography is included.'
Robert T. Anderson, American Reference Book Annual, 2005.
'The interpretation of the Bible in the Church Fathers attracts more and more sophisticated research; but until now we have lacked a really comprehensive overview. In these volumes, one of the foremost contemporary patristic scholars provides a superb conspectus of the field, which will be indispensable for the future of this research. I am profoundly grateful for the enormous labours and the expert critical judgement shown in Professor Kannengiesser's work.'
Rowan Williams, The Archbishop of Canterbury.
'Professor Kannengiesser's two-volume Handbook, including also contributions by specialist scholars, is a huge and ambitious enterprise which is the first of its kind in patristic exegesis. His exhaustive study of the work of modern patristic scholars of ancient Christian exegesis contains a magisterial consideration of fifty years of international research on the subject, and of the whole span of Christian Greek and Latin exegesis to the end of the seventh and the end of the eighth century respectively. The Oriental traditions are also examined. In his aim of giving the Bible back to the churches, Kannengiesser caters for specialist and non-specialist alike, as well as for post-modern, prejudiced readers, and those who are more electronically disposed and are not readers in the conventional sense. This Handbook is a triumph.'
Professor Pauline Allen, Director of the Center for Early Christian Studies at Australian Catholic University.
'impressionnant manuel [...] une telle somme suscite le respect, et même l’admiration, qu’elle n’a pas d’équivalent et qu’elle n’est pas près d’être remplacée.'
J.-M. Auwers, RHE 2012
Robert T. Anderson, American Reference Book Annual, 2005.
'The interpretation of the Bible in the Church Fathers attracts more and more sophisticated research; but until now we have lacked a really comprehensive overview. In these volumes, one of the foremost contemporary patristic scholars provides a superb conspectus of the field, which will be indispensable for the future of this research. I am profoundly grateful for the enormous labours and the expert critical judgement shown in Professor Kannengiesser's work.'
Rowan Williams, The Archbishop of Canterbury.
'Professor Kannengiesser's two-volume Handbook, including also contributions by specialist scholars, is a huge and ambitious enterprise which is the first of its kind in patristic exegesis. His exhaustive study of the work of modern patristic scholars of ancient Christian exegesis contains a magisterial consideration of fifty years of international research on the subject, and of the whole span of Christian Greek and Latin exegesis to the end of the seventh and the end of the eighth century respectively. The Oriental traditions are also examined. In his aim of giving the Bible back to the churches, Kannengiesser caters for specialist and non-specialist alike, as well as for post-modern, prejudiced readers, and those who are more electronically disposed and are not readers in the conventional sense. This Handbook is a triumph.'
Professor Pauline Allen, Director of the Center for Early Christian Studies at Australian Catholic University.
'impressionnant manuel [...] une telle somme suscite le respect, et même l’admiration, qu’elle n’a pas d’équivalent et qu’elle n’est pas près d’être remplacée.'
J.-M. Auwers, RHE 2012
€190.00$246.00
edited by Lorenzo DiTommaso & Lucian Turcescu
A Festschrift offered to Charles Kannengiesser on his 80th birthday, this volume contains twenty-five papers that address major issues pertaining to the reception and interpretation of the Bible in Christianity and Judaism of late antiquity.
€114.00$148.00
Robert C. Hill
The work examines the approach of the Antioch Fathers to the Old Testament.
If they shared an ignorance of the original language with the Fathers generally, their form of the Greek Bible was distinctive, as was their style of commentary and in particular their accent on the factual and ...
€142.00$184.00
Angela Russell Christman
“What Did Ezekiel See?” demonstrates how patristic commentators, through careful attention to Ezekiel 1, its relation to other biblical books, and the emerging interpretive tradition, found this text to illuminate theological issues concerning the Bible’s unity, knowledge of God, and Christian ...
€132.00$171.00
Elizabeth Ann Dively Lauro
Lauro discusses the theologian Origen’s employment of three distinct senses of scriptural meaning (pertaining to the body, soul, and spirit) within his exegetical theory and practice and demonstrates how they interrelate to facilitate his audience’s spiritual transformation.
€168.00$218.00
James D. Ernest
This study of uses of Scripture in the writings of Athanasius of Alexandria draws upon detailed textual observations to construct a coherent description of interpretive practices across the several genres in which this prominent fourth-century bishop wrote.
€171.00$222.00
Charles Kannengiesser
Through this comprehensive Handbook, the reader will obtain a balanced and cohesive picture of the Early Church. It gives an overall view of the reception, transmission, and interpretation of the Bible in the life and thought of the Church during the first five centuries of Christianity.
This ...
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