Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- List of abbreviations
- Bibliography of Henry Chadwick
- Does it make sense to speak of pre-Nicene orthodoxy?
- ‘And I have other sheep’ – John 10:16
- Reason and the rule of faith in the second century ad
- Adam in Origen
- Panegyric, history and hagiography in Eusebius' Life of Constantine
- Matthew 28:19, Eusebius, and the lex orandi
- The achievement of orthodoxy in the fourth century ad
- Eunomius: hair-splitting dialectician or defender of the accessibility of salvation?
- Some sources used in the De Trinitate ascribed to Didymus the Blind
- The rhetorical schools and their influence on patristic exegesis
- Pelagianism in the East
- The legacy of Pelagius: orthodoxy, heresy and conciliation
- Augustine and millenarianism
- Divine simplicity as a problem for orthodoxy
- The origins of monasticism
- Artistic idiom and doctrinal development
- Index of modern names
- Index of ancient and medieval names
- Index of sources
The origins of monasticism
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 08 October 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- List of abbreviations
- Bibliography of Henry Chadwick
- Does it make sense to speak of pre-Nicene orthodoxy?
- ‘And I have other sheep’ – John 10:16
- Reason and the rule of faith in the second century ad
- Adam in Origen
- Panegyric, history and hagiography in Eusebius' Life of Constantine
- Matthew 28:19, Eusebius, and the lex orandi
- The achievement of orthodoxy in the fourth century ad
- Eunomius: hair-splitting dialectician or defender of the accessibility of salvation?
- Some sources used in the De Trinitate ascribed to Didymus the Blind
- The rhetorical schools and their influence on patristic exegesis
- Pelagianism in the East
- The legacy of Pelagius: orthodoxy, heresy and conciliation
- Augustine and millenarianism
- Divine simplicity as a problem for orthodoxy
- The origins of monasticism
- Artistic idiom and doctrinal development
- Index of modern names
- Index of ancient and medieval names
- Index of sources
Summary
Henry Chadwick, once fellow of Queens', Cambridge, student of Christ Church, Oxford, and Dean, returned to Cambridge and became the most junior fellow of Magdalene. As he humbly performed the duties of the most junior fellow in the combination room after dinner, he would delight to tell a stranger that he was following the rule handed down from monasticism of old. In a volume devoted to the evolution of orthodoxy I offer him my hunch that the tradition is even older than he thinks. He will find the rule he followed in Magdalene explicitly stated in Philo's book On the Contemplative Life, §67. Ideas may evolve, but practice remains stubbornly the same, and I offer this essay as grateful tribute to a teacher and friend who passed on to me by precept and example the ancient practices of scholarship without which truth would soon be choked with weeds. I argue that, if orthodoxy evolved, the practice of the orthodox did not.
Everyone says that monasticism began with Antony and Pachomius in Upper Egypt, that is, at the end of the third century and the beginning of the fourth, and the case is certainly impressive. Athanasius' Life of Antony, and the Life of Pachomius are massive literary evidence of a popular movement, first of disciples around the great hermit Antony, and then of settled monasteries governed by an abbot according to a definite Rule, a Rule formulated by Pachomius.
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- Information
- The Making of OrthodoxyEssays in Honour of Henry Chadwick, pp. 270 - 287Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1989
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