
Since the earliest days of the Church, theologians have struggled to understand how humanity and divinity coexisted in the person of Christ. Proponents of the Arian heresy, which held that Jesus could not have been fully divine, found significant scriptural evidence of their position: Jesus wondered, questioned, feared, suffered, and prayed. The defenders of orthodoxy, such as Hilary of Poitiers, Ambrose of Milan, Jerome, and Augustine, showed considerable ingenuity in explaining how these biblical passages could be reconciled with Christ's divinity. Medieval theologians such as Peter Lombard, Thomas Aquinas, and Bonaventure, also grappled with these texts when confronting the rising threat of Arian heresy. Like their predecessors, they too faced the need to preserve Jesus' authentic humanity and to describe a mode of experiencing the passions that cast no doubt upon the perfect divinity of the Incarnate Word. As Kevin Madigan demonstrates, however, they also confronted an additional obstacle. The medieval theologians had inherited from the Greek and Latin fathers a body of opinion on the passages in question, which by this time had achieved normative cultural status in the Christian tradition. However, the Greek and Latin fathers wrote in a polemical situation, responding to the threat to orthodoxy posed by the Arians. As a consequence, they sometimes found themselves driven to extreme and sometimes contradictory statements. These statements seemed to their medieval successors either to compromise the true divinity of Christ, his true humanity, or the possibility that the divine and human were in communication with or metaphysically linked to one another. As a result, medieval theologians also needed to demonstrate how two equally authoritative but apparently contradictory statements could be reconciled-to protect their patristic forebears from any doubt about their unanimity or the soundness of their orthodoxy. Examining the arguments that resulted from these dual
How did high-medieval theologians reconcile the apparent contradictions between the humanity of Christ and his divine nature while navigating the authoritative, yet sometimes conflicting, legacy of the Church Fathers? Kevin Madigan, a scholar of historical theology, examines the intellectual labor of figures like Peter Lombard, Thomas Aquinas, and Bonaventure. He argues that these thinkers were tasked with preserving the integrity of Christ's dual nature while simultaneously defending the orthodoxy of the Greek and Latin patristic tradition against the pressures of Arian-influenced interpretations.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Scholars recognize this work as a rigorous contribution to the study of medieval intellectual history and the evolution of Christological doctrine. Readers frequently note the academic density of the prose, which is intended for an audience familiar with patristic and scholastic theological frameworks.
Page Count:
155
Publication Date:
2007-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0190295767
ISBN-13:
9780190295769
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