Sin in Origen’s Commentary on Romans

Sin in Origen’s Commentary on Romans
Title Sin in Origen’s Commentary on Romans PDF eBook
Author Stephen Bagby
Publisher Rowman & Littlefield
Total Pages 204
Release 2018-04-30
Genre Religion
ISBN 1978701098

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Sin in Origen’s Commentary on Romans examines Origen as a critical third century voice seeking to articulate a cogent doctrine of sin, and presents his magisterial Commentary on Romans as a unique window to understanding his mature thought on the subject. It argues that Origen’s teaching on original and volitional sin demonstrates continuity with and divergence from the prevailing theological tradition. It offers a substantial, revisionist account of the thought of one of the most important thinkers in early Christianity and takes up important anthropological and soteriological questions in Origen, as presented in a key, but often neglected text, in Origen’s corpus of biblical commentary.

Commentary on the Epistle to the Romans

Commentary on the Epistle to the Romans
Title Commentary on the Epistle to the Romans PDF eBook
Author Origen
Publisher CUA Press
Total Pages 370
Release 2001
Genre Bible
ISBN 9780813201047

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Commentary on the Epistle to the Romans, Books 1-5

Commentary on the Epistle to the Romans, Books 1-5
Title Commentary on the Epistle to the Romans, Books 1-5 PDF eBook
Author Origen
Publisher CUA Press
Total Pages 429
Release 2009-09
Genre Religion
ISBN 0813217369

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Sin in Origen's Commentary on Romans

Sin in Origen's Commentary on Romans
Title Sin in Origen's Commentary on Romans PDF eBook
Author Richard Stephen Bagby
Publisher
Total Pages
Release 2013
Genre
ISBN

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Commentary on the Epistle to the Romans, Books 6-10

Commentary on the Epistle to the Romans, Books 6-10
Title Commentary on the Epistle to the Romans, Books 6-10 PDF eBook
Author Origen
Publisher CUA Press
Total Pages 359
Release 2010-04
Genre Religion
ISBN 0813212049

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Origen and the History of Justification

Origen and the History of Justification
Title Origen and the History of Justification PDF eBook
Author Thomas P. Scheck
Publisher University of Notre Dame Pess
Total Pages 312
Release 2016-02-15
Genre Religion
ISBN 0268093024

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Standard accounts of the history of interpretation of Paul’s Letter to the Romans often begin with St. Augustine. As Thomas P. Scheck demonstrates, however, the Commentary on the Epistle to the Romans by Origen of Alexandria (185-254 CE) was a major work of Pauline exegesis which, by means of the Latin translation preserved in the West, had a significant influence on the Christian exegetical tradition. Scheck begins by exploring Origen’s views on justification and on the intimate connection of faith and post-baptismal good works as essential to justification. He traces the enormous influence Origen’s Commentary on Romans had on later theologians in the Latin West, including the ways in which theologians often appropriated Origen’s exegesis in their own work. Scheck analyzes in particular the reception of Origen by Pelagius, Augustine, William of St. Thierry, Erasmus, Cornelius Jansen, the Anglican Bishop Richard Montagu, and the Catholic lay apologist John Heigham, as well as Martin Luther, Philip Melanchthon, and other Protestant Reformers who harshly attacked Origen’s interpretation as fatally flawed. But as Scheck shows, theologians through the post-Reformation controversies of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries studied and engaged Origen extensively, even if not always in agreement. An important work in patristics, biblical interpretation, and historical theology, Origen and the History of Justification establishes the formative role played by Origen’s Pauline exegesis, while also contributing to our understanding of the theological issues surrounding justification in the western Christian tradition.

Romans 1-8

Romans 1-8
Title Romans 1-8 PDF eBook
Author Gwenfair Walters Adams
Publisher InterVarsity Press
Total Pages 684
Release 2019-04-30
Genre Religion
ISBN 083087299X

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With its themes of grace, sin, justification, and salvation through Christ alone, Paul's letter to the early church in Rome has been a primary focus of Christian reflection throughout church history. In this RCS volume, church historian Gwenfair Adams guides readers through a diversity of early modern commentary on the first eight chapters of Paul's epistle to the Romans.