Commentaries on Genesis 1-3
Ancient Christian Texts
By Severian of Gabala and
Bede the Venerable
Edited by Michael Glerup
Translated by Robert C. Hill and
Carmen S. Hardin
(hardcover)
- Retail Price: $60.00
- Your Price: $48.00 (20% Off Retail)
-
Product Details
Line: IVP Academic
Length: 162 pages
Size: 7 x 10 inches
Binding: hardcover
Published: November 2010
ISBN-10: 0-8308-2907-5
ISBN-13: 978-0-8308-2907-1
IVP Order Code: 2907Related Subjects
The church fathers displayed considerable interest in the early chapters of Genesis, and often wrote detailed commentaries or preached series of homilies on the Hexameron--the Six Days of Creation--among them Eustathius of Antioch, Basil the Great, Gregory of Nyssa, Theodore of Mopsuestia, Ambrose, John Chrysostom and Augustine.
This volume of Ancient Christian Texts offers a first-time English translation of Severian of Gabala's In cosmogoniam and a fresh translation of a portion of Bede the Venerable's Libri quatuor in principium Genesis. Severian, bishop of Gabala in Syria, who early on was a friend of John Chrysostom, later turned against him and opposed him at the Synod of Oak in 403. Though displaying his own strengths, weaknesses and idiosyncrasies, Severian still represents the so-called Antiochene school with its preference for literal over allegorical interpretation of texts. The text derives from the six homilies found in Migne’s Patrologia graeca, volume 56, together with a seventh homily found only in the 1613 Eton edition of John Chrysostom’s works, edited by Henry Savile, and falsely attributed to Chrysostom. These homilies have been ably translated with explanatory notes by Robert C. Hill.
The commentary from Bede the Venerable derives from Book I of his four-book commentary on Genesis from the account of creation to the casting out of Ishmael. Bede was a polymath--teacher, computist, exegete, historian--and one of the foremost scholars from Anglo-Saxon England. As a teacher, Bede strove to hand on the tradition of the church in a form easily understood by those who might not be well educated. These early chapters in Genesis provided teaching on creation, human origins, sin and redemption. The text deriving from Corpus Christianorum Latina is ably translated with explanatory notes by Carmen Hardin.
Related Information & Resources
Join the Ancient Christian Doctrine Series or the Ancient Christian Doctrine and Texts Series to save 30% on every volume!
Download the free sampler!
You Might Also Like
Genesis
(Tyndale Old Testament Commentaries)
Genesis 1-11
(Ancient Christian Commentary on Scripture)
Cart
Christianbook.com
The Lost World of Genesis One