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This book explores Cassian's use of scripture in the Conferences,
especially its biblical models to convey his understanding of the
desert ideal to the monastic communities of Gaul. Cassian intended
the scriptures and, implicitly, the Conferences to be the voices of
authority and orthodoxy in the Gallic environment. He interprets
familiar biblical characters in unfamiliar ways that exemplify his
ideal. By imitating their actions the monk enters a seamless
lineage of authority stretching back to Abraham. This book
demonstrates how the scriptures functioned as a dynamic force in
the lives of Christian monks in the fourth and fifth centuries,
emphasizes the importance of Cassian in the development of the
western monastic tradition, and offers an alternative to the
sometimes problematic descriptions of patristic exegesis as
"allegory" or "typology". Cassian has been described as little more
than a provider of information about Egyptian monasticism, but a
careful reading of his work reveals a sophisticated agenda to
define and institutionalize orthodox monasticism in the Latin West.
Whether intellectuals are counter-cultural escapists corrupting the
young or secular prophets leading us to prosperity, they are a
fixture of modern political life. In The Public Intellectual:
Between Philosophy and Politics, Arthur M. Melzer, Jerry
Weinberger, and M. Richard Zinman bring together a wide variety of
noted scholars to discuss the characteristics, nature, and role of
public thinkers. By looking at scholarly life in the West, this
work explores the relationship between thought and action, ideas
and events, reason and history.
This book explores Cassian's use of scripture in the Conferences,
especially its biblical models to convey his understanding of the
desert ideal to the monastic communities of Gaul. Cassian intended
the scriptures and, implicitly, the Conferences to be the voices of
authority and orthodoxy in the Gallic environment. He interprets
familiar biblical characters in unfamiliar ways that exemplify his
ideal. By imitating their actions the monk enters a seamless
lineage of authority stretching back to Abraham. This book
demonstrates how the scriptures functioned as a dynamic force in
the lives of Christian monks in the fourth and fifth centuries,
emphasizes the importance of Cassian in the development of the
western monastic tradition, and offers an alternative to the
sometimes problematic descriptions of patristic exegesis as
"allegory" or "typology". Cassian has been described as little more
than a provider of information about Egyptian monasticism, but a
careful reading of his work reveals a sophisticated agenda to
define and institutionalize orthodox monasticism in the Latin West.
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