Commemorating the 1700th anniversary of the Council of Nicaea, this volume offers an original examination of the enduring impact of the single most famous gathering of Christians since the apostolic age Despite the longstanding historical and theological study of the Council of Nicaea, several central questions remain. Was Nicaea a theological event or a political one? What does it mean if it was both? Was Constantine's intervention without precedent, or was he simply continuing a long-standing role of a Roman emperor who was responsible for leading a religious cult (albeit now for a different…mehr
Commemorating the 1700th anniversary of the Council of Nicaea, this volume offers an original examination of the enduring impact of the single most famous gathering of Christians since the apostolic age Despite the longstanding historical and theological study of the Council of Nicaea, several central questions remain. Was Nicaea a theological event or a political one? What does it mean if it was both? Was Constantine's intervention without precedent, or was he simply continuing a long-standing role of a Roman emperor who was responsible for leading a religious cult (albeit now for a different faith tradition)? And what about the actual theological debates of Nicaea and our ability to understand them? Scholars might never exhaust this avenue of inquiry, despite the numerous studies in recent decades. For many scholars and Christian activists today, the significance of Nicaea centers around the idea of conciliarity and what this has meant, both historically and theologically, for the Christian community. Why and how did Nicaea become foundational for thinking that the church operates in a conciliar manner? How did that work historically in different parts of the Christian world? And how should it work today? Nicaea and the Future of Christianity offers a fresh, globally-diverse, ecumenically-minded approach to these questions with an impressive collection of both senior and junior scholars, reflecting a diversity of views within the Orthodox, Catholic, and Protestant traditions. The great benefit of this wide-ranging approach lies precisely in its ability to see the many ways in which Nicaea continues to speak to the future of Christianity.
George E. Demacopoulos (Edited By) George E. Demacopoulos is Fr. John Meyendorff & Patterson Family Chair of Orthodox Christian Studies and Professor of Theology at Fordham University. He is also a Co-founding Director of the Orthodox Christian Studies Center at Fordham University. He serves as a Senior Fellow at Dumbarton Oaks and as President of the Byzantine Studies Association of North America. He is the author of five monographs and dozens of scholarly articles of the history of Christianity in the premodern period. Aristotle Papanikolaou (Edited By) Aristotle Papanikolaou is professor of theology, the Archbishop Demetrios Chair of Orthodox Theology and Culture, and a Co-Director of the Orthodox Christian Studies Center at Fordham University. He is also McDonald Distinguished Senior Fellow at the Emory University Center for the Study of Law and Religion. He is the author of two monographs and numerous scholarly articles on Orthodox theology, as well as co-editor of ten volumes.
Inhaltsangabe
Introduction George Demacopoulos and Aristotle Papanikolaou 1 PART I: NICAEAN THEOLOGIES Under the Shadow of the Samosatene: From Antioch 268 to Nicaea 325 and Beyond 9 John Behr Christophanic Exegesis in Defense of the Nicaean Faith: Patristic Authors and Scholars of Patristics 22 Bogdan G. Bucur Nicaea in the Dogmatic Order of Late Antiquity 42 Emanuel Fiano Hans Urs von Balthasar, Henri de Lubac, and the Paradox of Nicaea 52 Francesca Aran Murphy The Theologian, the Historian, and the Holy Spirit: Reflections Around Nicaea 67 Karen Kilby God with Us: A Contemporary Sophiological Christology 75 Brandon Gallaher PART II: HISTORICAL MEMORY The First Council of Nicaea: Golden Standard or Squandered Opportunity? 97 John Chryssavgis Preaching Nicaea in Verse: The Legacy of the Council in the Writings of Jacob of Serugh 117 Erin Walsh Civic Religion in the Long Roman Empire 137 Leonora Neville Nicaea’s Digital Afterlives 155 Caroline T. Schroeder PART III: CONCILIARITY The Council of Jerusalem and the Council of Nicaea 177 Leslie Baynes Nature, Will, and Grace: The Council of Nicaea and the Ontological Presuppositions of Conciliarity 191 Demetrios Bathrellos Conciliarity Beyond the Greco-Roman Empire: Thomas Christian Yogams and Lay Participation in Ecclesial Decision Making 208 Jaisy A. Joseph Nicaea, Negative Theology, Democracy 225 Vincent Lloyd PART IV: ECUMENICAL IMPLICATIONS A Symbol of the Whole: The Nicene Creed and Dogmatic Minimalism 239 Alexis Torrance Nicaea, Pelikan, and the Legitimacy of Doctrinal Development in Orthodoxy 250 A. Edward Siecienski Newman, Nicaea, and the Prerogatives of the Past 260 Cyril O’Regan Nicaea and the Legacy of Truth: Bounded Virtue and Ascetical Spirituality 281 Stephen M. Meawad PART V: THE FUTURE OF NICAEA Re-Reception of the Faith of Nicaea Then and Now: Reflections on the Role of Reinterpretation of Theology Through Conciliarity 293 Maxim Vasiljevic The Future of Nicaea 305 Christophe Chalamet Nicaea as a Task for the Future 315 Kathryn Tanner List of Contributors 329
Introduction George Demacopoulos and Aristotle Papanikolaou 1 PART I: NICAEAN THEOLOGIES Under the Shadow of the Samosatene: From Antioch 268 to Nicaea 325 and Beyond 9 John Behr Christophanic Exegesis in Defense of the Nicaean Faith: Patristic Authors and Scholars of Patristics 22 Bogdan G. Bucur Nicaea in the Dogmatic Order of Late Antiquity 42 Emanuel Fiano Hans Urs von Balthasar, Henri de Lubac, and the Paradox of Nicaea 52 Francesca Aran Murphy The Theologian, the Historian, and the Holy Spirit: Reflections Around Nicaea 67 Karen Kilby God with Us: A Contemporary Sophiological Christology 75 Brandon Gallaher PART II: HISTORICAL MEMORY The First Council of Nicaea: Golden Standard or Squandered Opportunity? 97 John Chryssavgis Preaching Nicaea in Verse: The Legacy of the Council in the Writings of Jacob of Serugh 117 Erin Walsh Civic Religion in the Long Roman Empire 137 Leonora Neville Nicaea’s Digital Afterlives 155 Caroline T. Schroeder PART III: CONCILIARITY The Council of Jerusalem and the Council of Nicaea 177 Leslie Baynes Nature, Will, and Grace: The Council of Nicaea and the Ontological Presuppositions of Conciliarity 191 Demetrios Bathrellos Conciliarity Beyond the Greco-Roman Empire: Thomas Christian Yogams and Lay Participation in Ecclesial Decision Making 208 Jaisy A. Joseph Nicaea, Negative Theology, Democracy 225 Vincent Lloyd PART IV: ECUMENICAL IMPLICATIONS A Symbol of the Whole: The Nicene Creed and Dogmatic Minimalism 239 Alexis Torrance Nicaea, Pelikan, and the Legitimacy of Doctrinal Development in Orthodoxy 250 A. Edward Siecienski Newman, Nicaea, and the Prerogatives of the Past 260 Cyril O’Regan Nicaea and the Legacy of Truth: Bounded Virtue and Ascetical Spirituality 281 Stephen M. Meawad PART V: THE FUTURE OF NICAEA Re-Reception of the Faith of Nicaea Then and Now: Reflections on the Role of Reinterpretation of Theology Through Conciliarity 293 Maxim Vasiljevic The Future of Nicaea 305 Christophe Chalamet Nicaea as a Task for the Future 315 Kathryn Tanner List of Contributors 329
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