
Sophronius was one of the most influential figures spanning the ecclesiastical troubles in East and West during the sixth to the seventh centuries. Poet, hagiographer, dogmatician, homilist, and liturgist, he was a widely-travelled monastic who had close ties with the see of Rome and an unrivalled knowledge of the workings of the anti-Chalcedonian churches, revealed in his Synodical Letter. Sophronius despatched this epistle to other church leaders when at an advanced age he became patriarch of Jerusalem in AD 634. The letter was read out at the Sixth Ecumenical Council in 680-1, and provided the only sustained rebuttal of the monoenergist doctrine which was used by eastern emperors and church leaders alike as a political strategy to unite Christians in the early Byzantine empire. Pauline Allen provides the first complete annotated translation of the Synodical Letter into a modern language. A comprehensive introduction situates the work in the context of the aftermath of the Council of Chalcedon (AD 451). It is accompanied by a dossier of translated documents by other writers of the time which illustrate the progress of the debate and its political and ecclesiastical repercussions in the first half of the seventh century.
This volume investigates the theological and political significance of the Synodical Letter of Sophronius of Jerusalem as a primary defense against the monoenergist doctrine in the seventh-century Byzantine Empire. Pauline Allen, a scholar of early Christian history, utilizes the text of the letter alongside a curated dossier of contemporary documents to reconstruct the ecclesiastical climate of the era. The work argues that Sophronius served as a pivotal intellectual force whose writings provide critical insight into the tensions between the see of Rome and the anti-Chalcedonian churches during a period of intense imperial instability.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Scholars and historians recognize this work as a foundational resource for understanding the complexities of seventh-century Christological debates. Readers frequently note the academic density of the prose, which is tailored for researchers and students of patristics and early church history.
Page Count:
260
Publication Date:
2009-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0191563137
ISBN-13:
9780191563133
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