
What sort of Bible did Augustine have? How did he quote from it -- and was he accurate? Do Augustine's biblical citations transmit readings not found in any surviving manuscripts? This book is part of a major project on the Old Latin versions of the Gospel according to John, and uses Augustine as a test-case to examine the importance of the evidence provided by the Church Fathers for the text of the Gospels. The early history of the Latin Bible is reconstructed from Augustine's comments in his treatise De doctrina christiana (On Christian teaching). Details are assembled from sermons, letters, and other writings to show how Augustine and his contemporaries used the Bible in the liturgy of the Church, public debates, and in composing their own works. Augustine's own methods of citing the Bible are analysed, and features are identified which are characteristic of citations produced from memory rather than read from a gospel codex. The second part of the book is a chronological survey of the biblical text in Augustine's works, showing how he switched from using the older versions of the Gospel to the revised text of Jerome, which later became known as the Vulgate. Finally, a verse-by-verse commentary is provided on all the significant readings in Augustine's text of John, assessing their significance for the history of the Latin Bible, and in some cases the Greek tradition as well. Details are also given of Augustine's exegesis of particular verses of the Gospel, making this an indispensable handbook for biblical scholars and church historians alike.
This book investigates the nature of the biblical text used by Augustine of Hippo and evaluates the reliability of patristic citations in reconstructing the early history of the Latin Gospel of John. Hugh Houghton, a specialist in the textual history of the New Testament, utilizes Augustine's extensive corpus as a primary test case to bridge the gap between surviving Latin manuscripts and the actual biblical texts employed by Church Fathers. By analyzing Augustine's methods of quotation and his transition from older Latin versions to Jerome's Vulgate, the author provides a rigorous framework for understanding how early Christian writers engaged with scripture in liturgical and polemical contexts.
What You Will Find
Scholars in the field of patristics and biblical textual criticism recognize this work as a foundational resource for understanding the transmission of the Latin Bible. The text is noted for its high level of academic rigor and its utility as a reference tool for historians and theologians alike.
Page Count:
336
Publication Date:
2008-11-15
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0199545928
ISBN-13:
9780199545926
No comments yet. Be the first to share your thoughts!