Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

5 Situating Victorinus' Commentaries on Paul

View through CrossRef
Abstract This chapter surveys the various hypotheses suggested by scholars for establishing Victorinus’ motivations for commenting on the Pauline corpus. Reader-response criticism is employed to elucidate Victorinus’ intentions toward his audience. The dating of the commentaries, in relation to that of his Trinitarian treatises, is closely examined. Two major thematic complexes emerge from a reading of the extant commentaries on Galatians, Ephesians, and Philippians: the Trinitarian Controversy; and justification by faith, often accompanied by polemics against Judaizing Christians. Victorinus’ concern to articulate an understanding of God and Christ consonant with the creed of Nicea is patent, but the attempt to identify that concern as the major motivation for his authorship of the commentaries is unconvincing. Victorinus’ frequent polemics against Jewish practices derives his own concern about Christians engaged in Judaizing — such Judaizing being well-documented by a variety of fourth-century sources. Victorinus’ pioneering employment of the formulation ‘faith alone’ (sola fides) and his understanding of justification by faith does not reach the point of Augustine’s anti-Pelagian exegesis but is not itself reducible to an incipient Pelagianism.
Title: 5 Situating Victorinus' Commentaries on Paul
Description:
Abstract This chapter surveys the various hypotheses suggested by scholars for establishing Victorinus’ motivations for commenting on the Pauline corpus.
Reader-response criticism is employed to elucidate Victorinus’ intentions toward his audience.
The dating of the commentaries, in relation to that of his Trinitarian treatises, is closely examined.
Two major thematic complexes emerge from a reading of the extant commentaries on Galatians, Ephesians, and Philippians: the Trinitarian Controversy; and justification by faith, often accompanied by polemics against Judaizing Christians.
Victorinus’ concern to articulate an understanding of God and Christ consonant with the creed of Nicea is patent, but the attempt to identify that concern as the major motivation for his authorship of the commentaries is unconvincing.
Victorinus’ frequent polemics against Jewish practices derives his own concern about Christians engaged in Judaizing — such Judaizing being well-documented by a variety of fourth-century sources.
Victorinus’ pioneering employment of the formulation ‘faith alone’ (sola fides) and his understanding of justification by faith does not reach the point of Augustine’s anti-Pelagian exegesis but is not itself reducible to an incipient Pelagianism.

Related Results

Marius Victorinus' Commentary on Galatians
Marius Victorinus' Commentary on Galatians
Abstract Marius Victorinus, the first Latin commentator on the Pauline epistles, has generally been considered out of the mainstream of fourth century Latin Christia...
2 The Life and Times of Marius Victorinus
2 The Life and Times of Marius Victorinus
Abstract This chapter discusses the ancient testimonia to Victorinus, and reconstructs a probable vita of Victorinus. A professor of rhetoric at Rome who authored im...
Victorinus, Marius, c. 285–c. 365 CE
Victorinus, Marius, c. 285–c. 365 CE
Marius Victorinus is one of the few direct links between the Platonist schools of late antiquity and Latin theology. A professor of rhetoric in mid-4th century Rome, Victorinus is ...
The Pragmatics of Amusement in Selected British Football Commentaries
The Pragmatics of Amusement in Selected British Football Commentaries
Sport in general and football in particular have become the most popular form of amusement nowadays throughout the special performance of the commentators who comment on the game. ...
Medieval Latin Commentaries on Classical Myth
Medieval Latin Commentaries on Classical Myth
As the abundance of extant medieval commentaries attests, classical mythology presented several conundrums for medieval audiences. The historical distance between the writers of cl...
3 The Apostle Paul in Fourth‐Century Roman Art
3 The Apostle Paul in Fourth‐Century Roman Art
Abstract This chapter traces the development of the first hundred years of Pauline iconography in all media (sarcophagi, catacomb frescos, church mosaics, small obje...
Commentaries
Commentaries
Commentaries are important research tools in the field of Hellenic studies: even those classicists who are most critical of them tend to use them frequently. More fundamentally sti...

Back to Top