
Daniel A. Keating presents a comprehensive account of sanctification and divinization in Cyril. By establishing the importance of pneumatology in Cyril's narrative of salvation and by showing the requirement for an ethical aspect of divinization grounded in the example of Christ himself, this study brings a corrective to certain readings of Cyril that tend to exaggerate the 'somatic' or 'physicalistic' character of his understanding of divinization. Keating argues that Cyril correlates the somatic and pneumatic means of our union with Christ, and integrates impressively the ontological and ethical aspects of our sanctification and divinization. A final chapter compares these findings with Theodore of Mopsuestia, Augustine, and Leo the Great, in order to examine in brief the relationship between Eastern and Western accounts of salvation.
How does Cyril of Alexandria integrate the somatic and pneumatic dimensions of sanctification and divinization within his theological framework? Daniel A. Keating, a scholar of patristic theology, examines Cyril's writings to provide a balanced account of salvation. He argues that Cyril's theology requires both an ontological union with Christ and an ethical response, challenging interpretations that overemphasize a purely physicalistic view of divinization.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Scholars and theologians recognize this work as a significant contribution to the study of Cyrillian theology and the nuances of patristic soteriology. Readers frequently note the academic density of the prose and the precision with which Keating navigates complex historical debates regarding Eastern and Western accounts of salvation.
Page Count:
328
Publication Date:
2004-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0191532991
ISBN-13:
9780191532993
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