Digital Verbum Edition
This collection of essays integrates scholarly and scriptural interpretations, Eastern Orthodox biblical scholarship, together with biblical interpretations throughout church history. Unlike the Western interpretations that read Romans in terms of theological anthropology, the Greek Fathers don’t presuppose such a concept. Each of the articles in Greek Patristic and Eastern Orthodox Interpretations of Romans invites Western scholars and students to re-read Paul’s letter with new eyes: with a greater sensitivity to the nuances of the Greek text, an openness to envision what Paul is saying from very different theological and hermeneutical perspectives, and the awareness that the Greek Fathers addressed particular contextual issues of their time.
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“But, on the other hand, it clearly appears that the Holy Scripture is not the only and not the supreme authority for the early Church. Because, indeed, there is another supreme authority for the early Christians: Jesus Christ Himself. The Scripture has its value and authority only in connection to Christ as supreme authority.” (Page 5)
“II. Interdependency between Human and Nature: a Pauline Perspective; the Hope of Creation” (Page 156)
“This unity between word and sacrament—both rooted in divine silence will probably seem strange and unwarranted to non-Orthodox Christians. The Protestant distinction, even dichotomy, between word and sacrament, preaching and liturgy, proclamation and celebration, is foreign to Orthodox theology.39 A purely ‘verbal’ understanding of the word has reduced the concept of the ‘Word of God’ to the canonical Scriptures or even to the sermon. But the scriptural word is not necessarily self-revealing (cf. Luke 18:34). Even Christ’s own words are not automatically self-revealing, and that explains why he invariably links proclamation of ‘good-news’ of the Kingdom with concrete, material signs that reveal the deeper meaning and confirm the truth of his words.” (Page 11)
“‘If some new question arises about which one has not made a decision, it is necessary to turn to the opinions of the Holy Fathers, at least to those who, in their time and place, stayed in unity of communion and of faith and were considered recognized masters. And all that they could sustain in unity of thought and feeling is necessary to be considered, without doubt and hesitation, the true and universal doctrine of the Church.’” (Page 1)
Daniel Patte teaches at Vanderbilt University and is the author of The Challenge of Discipleship and Discipleship According to the Sermon on the Mount, and an editor of Engaging Augustine on Romans, Gender, Tradition, and Romans: Shared Ground, Uncertain Borders, Reading Israel in Romans: Legitimacy and Plausibility of Divergent Interpretations and the experimental journal Semeia.
Vasile Mihoc is a professor of New Testament at Facultatea de Teologie “Andrei Saguna” in Romania.
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Michael Bremner
6/27/2014
David J. Wilson
5/2/2014