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The Anti-Pelagian Christology of Augustine of Hippo, 396-430 Dominic Keech (Assistant Curate of the parish of Wantage, diocese of Oxford)

The Anti-Pelagian Christology of Augustine of Hippo, 396-430 By Dominic Keech (Assistant Curate of the parish of Wantage, diocese of Oxford)

The Anti-Pelagian Christology of Augustine of Hippo, 396-430 by Dominic Keech (Assistant Curate of the parish of Wantage, diocese of Oxford)


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Summary

A new study which engages with some of the most controversial questions in recent scholarship on Augustine of Hippo, the Origenist controversy and the development of Christology through the history of the ecumenical councils.

The Anti-Pelagian Christology of Augustine of Hippo, 396-430 Summary

The Anti-Pelagian Christology of Augustine of Hippo, 396-430 by Dominic Keech (Assistant Curate of the parish of Wantage, diocese of Oxford)

Evading established accounts of the development of doctrine in the Patristic era, Augustine's Christology has yet to receive the critical scholarly attention it deserves. This study focuses on Augustine's understanding of the humanity of Christ, as it emerged in dialogue with his anti-Pelagian conception of human freedom and Original Sin. By reinterpreting the Pelagian controversy as a Western continuation of the Origenist controversy before it, Dominic Keech argues that Augustine's reading of Origen lay at the heart of his Christological response to Pelagianism. Augustine is therefore situated within the network of fourth and fifth century Western theologians concerned to defend Origen against accusations of Platonic error and dangerous heresy. Opening with a survey of scholarship on Augustine's Christology and anti-Pelagian theology, Keech proceeds by redrawing the narrative of Augustine's engagement with the issues and personalities involved in the Origenist and Pelagian controversies. He highlights the predominant motif of Augustine's anti-Pelagian Christology: the humanity of Christ, 'in the likeness of sinful flesh' (Rom. 8.3), and argues that this is elaborated through a series of receptions from the work of Ambrose and Origen. The theological problems raised by this Christology - in a Christ who is exempt from sin in a way which unbalances his human nature - are explored by examining Augustine's understanding of Apollinarianism, and his equivocal statements on the origin of the human soul. This forms the backdrop for the book's speculative conclusion, that the inconsistencies in Augustine's Christology can be explained by placing it in an Origenian framework, in which the soul of Christ remains sinless in the Incarnation because of its relationship to the eternal Word, after the fall of souls to embodiment.

The Anti-Pelagian Christology of Augustine of Hippo, 396-430 Reviews

Keech's book is densely argued and expansively researched, drawing on an impressively wide range of Augustine's own writings alongside extensive engagement with secondary scholarship. * Anglican Theological Review *

Table of Contents

Introduction ; 1. Recovering an Augustinian Christology ; 2. Augustine and Origen: the fathers of Pelagianism ; 3. A Divine Humanity in Sin's Likeness ; 4. Augustine, Origen and the Exegesis of Romans 8.3 ; 5. Apollinaris Redux? Augustine and the Psychology of Christ ; 6. The Election of the Dominical Human: Augustine and the unfallen soul of Christ ; Conclusion

Additional information

NPB9780199662234
9780199662234
0199662231
The Anti-Pelagian Christology of Augustine of Hippo, 396-430 by Dominic Keech (Assistant Curate of the parish of Wantage, diocese of Oxford)
New
Hardback
Oxford University Press
2012-10-18
280
N/A
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