Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Foreword
- Abbreviations
- Introduction: survey of the history of Antioch
- 1 The religious background to Antiochene Christianity: pagan, Jewish, gnostic
- 2 The interpretation of the biblical record
- 3 Historiography in the Eastern Church
- 4 The doctrine of the nature of God
- 5 The use of Greek philosophy by the Eastern Church
- 6 The human experience of Christ and the salvation of man
- 7 Antiochene theology and the religious life
- Appendix 1 Eastern representation at Nicaea
- Appendix 2 The feminine element in Syrian Christianity
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Index
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Foreword
- Abbreviations
- Introduction: survey of the history of Antioch
- 1 The religious background to Antiochene Christianity: pagan, Jewish, gnostic
- 2 The interpretation of the biblical record
- 3 Historiography in the Eastern Church
- 4 The doctrine of the nature of God
- 5 The use of Greek philosophy by the Eastern Church
- 6 The human experience of Christ and the salvation of man
- 7 Antiochene theology and the religious life
- Appendix 1 Eastern representation at Nicaea
- Appendix 2 The feminine element in Syrian Christianity
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
This book had its beginning, I think, on a day early in the second World War when I asked Professor Thomas Walter Manson to recommend a book which would give me a general view of all that was meant by the term ‘Antiochene’. He replied, ‘There isn't such a book’, and then with the twinkle of the eye which endeared him to so many, he added, ‘so you had better write it.’ The present book, thirty-nine years later, is far from being the book which that greatest of scholars may have had in mind, but I have tried to make it one which might have been useful to me in my youth.
I have been fortunate in the generous understanding of my wife; in the scholarship of my friend, Mr J. K. Waddell, who many times saved me from my own ignorance; in my surgeon, Mr Robert Ryall, who gave me that very great gift, time in which to finish what I had begun; and in the constant support of my brother, Professor J. M. Wallace-Hadrill, to whom I dedicate a book which would have been better if I had more often acted on his advice.
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- Chapter
- Information
- Christian AntiochA Study of Early Christian Thought in the East, pp. viiPublisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1982