Published online by Cambridge University Press: 01 December 2022
This chapter investigates Chrysostom’s primary ways of interpreting scriptural stories, or narratives, in relation to providence. It finds that the exegete often reads narratives together, in consistent ‘clusters’, which share common narrative structures, testifying to God’s habitual way of interacting providentially with the saints. It further argues that this way of reading narratives together is a sort of typology which is at odds with others within the school of Antioch.
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