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Reading Augustine presents concise, personal readings of St.
Augustine of Hippo from leading philosophers and religion scholars.
Augustine of Hippo knew that this fallen world is a place of
sadness and suffering. In such a world, he determined that
compassion is the most suitable and virtuous response. Its
transformative powers could be accessed through the mind and its
memories, through the healing of the Incarnation, and through the
discernment of Christians who are forced to navigate through a
corrupt and deceptive world. Susan Wessel considers Augustine's
theology of compassion by examining his personal experience of loss
and his reflections concerning individual and corporate suffering
in the context of the human condition and salvation.
What were the historical and cultural processes by which Cyril of
Alexandria was elevated to canonical status while his opponent,
Nestorius, bishop of Constantinople, was made into a heretic? In
contrast to previous scholarship, Susan Wessel concludes that
Cyril's success in being elevated to orthodox status was not simply
a political accomplishment based on political alliances he had
fashioned as opportunity arose. Nor was it a dogmatic victory,
based on the clarity and orthodoxy of Cyril's doctrinal claims.
Instead, it was his strategy in identifying himself with the
orthodoxy of the former bishop of Alexandria, Athanasius, in his
victory over Arianism, in borrowing Athanasius' interpretive
methods, and in skilfully using the tropes and figures of the
second sophistic that made Cyril a saint in the Greek and Coptic
Orthodox Churches.
This book examines how the early Christian elite articulated and
cultivated the affective dimensions of compassion in a Roman world
that promoted emotional tranquillity as the path to human
flourishing. Drawing upon a wide range of early Christians from
both east and west, Wessel situates each author in the broader
cultural and intellectual context. The reader is introduced to the
diverse conditions in which Christians felt and were urged to feel
compassion in exemplary ways, and in which warnings were sounded
against the possibilities for distortion and exploitation. Wessel
argues that the early Christians developed literary methods and
rhetorical techniques to bring about appropriate emotional
responses to human suffering. Their success in this regard marks
the beginning of affective compassion as a Christian virtue.
Comparison with early modern and contemporary philosophers and
ethicists further demonstrates the intrinsic worth of the early
Christian understanding of compassion.
Reading Augustine presents concise, personal readings of St.
Augustine of Hippo from leading philosophers and religion scholars.
Augustine of Hippo knew that this fallen world is a place of
sadness and suffering. In such a world, he determined that
compassion is the most suitable and virtuous response. Its
transformative powers could be accessed through the mind and its
memories, through the healing of the Incarnation, and through the
discernment of Christians who are forced to navigate through a
corrupt and deceptive world. Susan Wessel considers Augustine's
theology of compassion by examining his personal experience of loss
and his reflections concerning individual and corporate suffering
in the context of the human condition and salvation.
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