
This Study Contextualizes The Achievement Of A Strategically Crucial Figure In Byzantium's Turbulent Seventh Century, The Monk And Theologian Maximus The Confessor (580-662). Building On Newer Biographical Research And A Growing International Body Of Scholarship, As Well As On Fresh Examination Of His Diverse Literary Corpus, Paul Blowers Develops A Profile Integrating The Two Principal Initiatives Of Maximus's Career: First, His Reinterpretation Of The Christocentric Economy Of Creation And Salvation As A Framework For Expounding The Spiritual And Ascetical Life Of Monastic And Non-monastic Christians; And Second, His Intensifying Public Involvement In The Last Phase Of The Ancient Christological Debates, The Monothelete Controversy, Wherein Maximus Helped Lead An East-west Coalition Against Byzantine Imperial Attempts Doctrinally To Limit Jesus Christ To A Single (divine) Activity And Will Devoid Of Properly Human Volition. Blowers Identifies What He Terms Maximus's Cosmo-politeian Worldview, A Contemplative And Ascetical Vision Of The Participation Of All Created Beings In The Novel Politeia, Or Reordered Existence, Inaugurated By Christ's New Theandric Energy. Maximus Ultimately Insinuated His Teaching On The Christoformity And Cruciformity Of The Human Vocation With His Rigorous Explication Of The Precise Constitution Of Christ's Own Composite Person. In Outlining This Cosmo-politeian Theory, Blowers Additionally Sets Forth A Theo-dramatic Reading Of Maximus, Inspired By Hans Urs Von Balthasar, Which Depicts The Motion Of Creation And History According To The Christocentric Plot Or Interplay Of Divine And Creaturely Freedoms. Blowers Also Amplifies How Maximus's Cumulative Achievement Challenged Imperial Ideology In The Seventh Century—the Repercussions Of Which Cost Him His Life-and How It Generated Multiple Recontextualizations In The Later History Of Theology.
This study investigates the theological and political significance of Maximus the Confessor within the volatile context of seventh-century Byzantium. Paul M. Blowers, a scholar of early Christian history, utilizes recent biographical research and a comprehensive analysis of Maximus’s literary corpus to reconstruct the monk's intellectual contributions. The author argues that Maximus’s work represents a cohesive integration of ascetical spirituality and Christological doctrine, specifically addressing the Monothelete controversy. By applying a theo-dramatic framework, Blowers demonstrates how Maximus’s worldview challenged imperial authority and redefined the human vocation in relation to the divine.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Scholars recognize this work as a significant contribution to the study of Maximus the Confessor, particularly for its ability to bridge the gap between his ascetical writings and his public political resistance. Readers frequently note the academic density of the prose, which is intended for those with a background in patristic theology or Byzantine history.
Page Count:
368
Publication Date:
2016-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0191068802
ISBN-13:
9780191068805
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