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Origen, Methodius, and Love's Freedom

科研成果: Chapter

摘要

There seems little doubt that when it came to writing his own Symposium, Methodius had Origen in his sights even more than Plato. For all that Origen might be considered a mystic, or at least the grandfather of a Christian intellectual mysticism (and one who was given pride of place by Bernard McGinn in his multi-volume tracing of that tradition), for Methodius this intellectualism had to be supplemented by a philosophy of eros that would serve the cause of chaste love in practice.1 Also, although in Methodius’ De Autoexousia the moral centre of things accords with Origen’s goal of anti-determinism, nevertheless there is disaccord with the Alexandrian’s means of getting to that goal of “true freedom”. Evil is an accident of substance and it requires being controlled and thereby put in its place. This was not a hard “encratism,” but it did serve to reinforce a popular ideal form of Christianity verging on the encratic, as was becoming standard in Asia Minor and more universally. This paper will examine to what extent Methodius’ vision was a “biblical, Christian” one rather than an elitist, philosophical one.
源语言English
主期刊名Divine and Human Love in Jewish and Christian Antiquity
编辑Kylie Crabbe, David Lincicum
章节18
287-298
页数11
ISBN(电子版)9783161634642
DOI
出版状态Published - 1 12月 2024

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