Fr. 120.00

Christ, the Spirit, and Human Transformation in Gregory of Nyssa s - in Canticum Canticoru

English · Hardback

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Description

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This book investigates the writings of Gregory of Nyssa, one of the most important figures in Christian history. Gregory wrote in two different genres--doctrinal and spiritual--but how these two genres are related has been little explored by scholars. Author Alexander Abecina addresses this issue by showing how Gregory's early doctrinal thought underpins his spiritual interpretation of the Song of Songs in his final written work, In Canticum Canticorum. The author discusses such topics as baptismal theology, trinitarian theology, Christology, pneumatology, and allegorical exegesis. He also engages with the latest contemporary scholarship on Gregory of Nyssa.

List of contents










  • Acknowledgements

  • Abbreviations

  • Introduction

  • Part I: Trinity, Christology and Pneumatology: Gregory Of Nyssa's Doctrinal Account Of Human Transformation and Union With God (c. 370--385)

  • 1. Spiritual Marriage and Baptismal Exegesis in De virginitate

  • 2. Baptism and Trinitarian Theology

  • 3. Human Transformation and Christology in Contra Eunomium III

  • 4. Spirit-based Christology in Antirrheticus adversus Apolinarium

  • 5. Tracing the Spirit: Christology in Contra Eunomium III Reconsidered

  • Part II: Analysis of In Canticum Canticorum (c. 391)

  • 6. Baptismal Exegesis of the Song of Songs

  • 7. Advancement and Ascent: The Unified Activity of Christ and the Spirit

  • 8. Christ's Pneumatic Body in the Glory of the Trinity

  • Conclusion

  • Bibliography of Primary Sources

  • Bibliography of Secondary Sources

  • Index



About the author

Alexander L. Abecina holds a PhD in Theology and Religious Studies from the University of Cambridge where he completed a doctoral dissertation on Gregory of Nyssa. His publications include Time and Sacramentality in Gregory of Nyssa's Contra Eunomium and articles in Modern Theology, Journal of Theological Studies, and International Journal of Systematic Theology.

Summary

This book provides a comprehensive literary and theological analysis of Gregory of Nyssa's theology of union with God, culminating in a fresh reading of his final written work, In Canticum Canticorum (c.391), a collection of fifteen allegorical homilies on the Song of Songs. Part I gives the essential background for the study of In Canticum Canticorum by analysing several of Gregory's earlier works (c.370--385), tracing the main contours of his account of the human transformation and union with God. Author Alexander Abecina explores topics such as Gregory's theology of virginity and spiritual marriage, his theology of baptism, his trinitarian theology, and his Spirit-based Christology. In Part II Abecina builds on his key findings in Part I to structure a detailed analysis of In Canticum Canticorum.

Engaging with the latest contemporary scholarship on Gregory of Nyssa, the author shows how Gregory's allegorical interpretation of the Song of Songs represents a corresponding account of human transformation and union with God from the perspective of subjective experience of this reality. Rather than marking a new development in Gregory's mature thought, Abecina demonstrates that the subjective experience gained from Gregory's reading of the Song of Songs recapitulates the key elements of his objective account and therefore renders coherent his earlier soteriological doctrine.

Additional text

Abecina has produced a very helpful close reading of Gregory's pneumatology in his homilies on the Song of Songs, showing how deeply Gregory's vision of the Spirit draws together his understanding of the Christian's transformation in the body of Christ and his Trinitarian theology. This book models for us how we must attend to the theological dynamics of Gregory's texts.

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