The Origins of the Canons of Hippolytus - Nathan P. Chase, Maxwell E. Johnson

The Origins of the Canons of Hippolytus

Buch | Softcover
144 Seiten
2024
Liturgical Press (Verlag)
978-0-8146-8915-8 (ISBN)
31,40 inkl. MwSt
An analysis of the origin of the Canons of Hippolytus, church orders from the fourth century.
 
Can a case still be made for Egyptian origin of the Canons of Hippolytus? This is the question that noted scholars Maxwell E. Johnson and Nathan P. Chase focus on in response to the recent translation of and commentary on the Canons of Hippolytus by Alistair Stewart, who claims a Cappadocian origin, with a possibly later Egyptian redaction. In The Origins of the Canons of Hippolytus, the authors look at the relevant canons and argue for an Egyptian origin, though not necessarily “Alexandrian.” For students and teachers of liturgy, theology, and the early church, this volume provides contemporary research and careful analysis on the origin and relevance of the Canons of Hippolytus, supporting the claim that they remain the earliest derivative document of the Apostolic tradition.

Nathan P. Chase is assistant professor of liturgical and sacramental theology at Aquinas Institute of Theology in St. Louis, Missouri. He has contributed articles to the field of liturgical studies, including pieces on liturgy in the early Church, initiation, the Eucharist, inculturation, and the Western Non-Roman Rites, particularly the Hispano-Mozarabic tradition. His books include The Homiliae Toletanae and the Theology of Lent and Easter (Peeters, 2020) and The Anaphoral Tradition in the ‘Barcelona Papyrus’ (Brepols, 2023). Maxwell E. Johnson is emeritus professor of liturgy at the University of Notre Dame and a retired presbyter in the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America. His numerous publications are on the origins and development of early Christian liturgy, contemporary rites, and current ecumenical and theological questions in both East and West. He is the author and/or editor of more than twenty books and over one hundred essays and articles. He is also a former president of the North American Academy of Liturgy, a member of the Society of Oriental Liturgy, a member of Societas Liturgica, and a member of the scientific advisory board for the journal Ecclesia Orans.

Contents
Abbreviations   ix
Introduction   xi
I. The Church Orders   xii
II. Comparing The Apostolic Tradition and the Canons of Hippolytus   xviii
               Commentary
CH §1 – Concerning the Holy Faith   3
CH §2 – Concerning Bishops   5
CH §3 – Prayer over him who becomes Bishop, and Order of the Liturgy   15
CH §4 – Concerning the Ordination of Presbyters   21
CH §5 – Concerning the Ordination of Deacons   25
CH §7 – Concerning the Choice of Reader and of Subdeacon   27
CH §9b – [Concerning . . . the Function of Widows]   29
CH §12 – Prohibition of Several Occupations: He who is involved in them is only to be received after Repentance   31
CH §16 – Concerning the Christian who has a Concubine and is Married to Another   35 
CH §17 – Concerning the Free Woman: What she [must] do   37
CH §18 – Concerning the Midwives and the Separation of Women from Men during Prayer:
                 The Girls are to Veil Their Head; Concerning the Women who give Birth   41
CH §19   43
              19a  Concerning the Catechumen who is Killed because of Witness before Baptism: He is to be Buried with the Martyrs.
                      Concerning the Catechumens: The Conditions which the Catechumens are to fulfil during the Baptism and the Exorcism,
                      the Order of the Liturgy of Baptism, and the Consecration of the Liturgy of the Body and the Blood
              19b  Chapter of the Catechumens
CH §20 – Concerning the Fast of Wednesday, of Friday, and of the Forty   53
CH §21 – Concerning the Assembly of all the Priests and of the People at the Church each Day   57
CH §22 – Concerning the Week of the Passover of the Jews, During which one sets aside Joy:
                Concerning what one Eats then, and Concerning him who was Abroad and did not know the Pascha   63
CH §§24/25a   67
               24    Concerning the Visit of the Bishop to the Sick: When a Sick Person has Prayed in Church and has a Home, he is to go there
               25a  Concerning [the Appointment of] the Steward of the Sick by the Bishop . . .
CH §§25b/26/27   71
               25b  [ . . . Concerning the Times of Prayer] 26 Concerning the hearing of the Word in Church and Prayer There 27 Concerning
                       him who does not go to Church, Each Day he is to Read the Scriptures—Each Time you Pray, Wash your Hands—and Concerning
                       the Exhortation to Prayer in the Middle of the Night and at the Time when the Cock Crows
CH §28 – None of the Faithful is to Taste Anything until after having Partaken of the Mysteries, especially on the Days of Fasting   77
CH §29 – Concerning Vigilance over the Altar so that Nothing falls into the Cup: Nothing is to fall [into it] by [the fault of] the
                 Priests or the Faithful, for Fear that an Evil Spirit should have Power over it. One is not to say anything behind the Veil, except in Prayer.
                 When they have finished communicating the People, all those who enter into the [Holy] Place are to recite the Psalms in Place of the Bells. And
                 Concerning the Sign of the Cross, and the Dust of the Sanctuary which is to be thrown into the Stream   81
CH §30 – Concerning the Catechumens   85
CH §32 – Concerning the Virgins and Widows: They are to Fast and Pray in the Church. The Clergy are to Fast according to their Choice.
                 The Bishop is not to be held to the Fast, except with the Clergy. And concerning a Meal or Supper arranged for the Poor   87
CH §35 – Concerning a Deacon present at a Meal in the Absence of a Presbyter. He is to replace him for the Prayer and the Breaking
                 of the Bread, for the Blessing but not for the Body. Concerning the Dismissal of the Widows before Evening   93 
CH §36 – Concerning the First Fruits of the Earth, the First of their Floors and their Presses: Oil, Honey, Milk, Wool, and
                 the Rest which one brings to the Bishop for him to Bless It   95
CH §37 – Concerning the Fact that Every Time the Bishop offers the Mysteries, the Deacons and the Presbyters are to join [him],
                Clothed in White Garments, more magnificent than [those of] all the People: Similarly, the Readers   99
CH §38 – Concerning the Night when our Lord was Raised: No one is to Sleep that Night, and one is to Bathe [beforehand].
                Concerning him who sins after Baptism and Explanation of that, And the Prohibition of what one ought not [to do],
                and of the Practice of what one ought [to do]   103
Conclusion   113

Erscheint lt. Verlag 15.12.2024
Zusatzinfo Illustrations
Verlagsort Collegeville, MN
Sprache englisch
Maße 127 x 203 mm
Gewicht 170 g
Themenwelt Geschichte Teilgebiete der Geschichte Religionsgeschichte
Religion / Theologie Christentum Kirchengeschichte
Religion / Theologie Christentum Moraltheologie / Sozialethik
ISBN-10 0-8146-8915-9 / 0814689159
ISBN-13 978-0-8146-8915-8 / 9780814689158
Zustand Neuware
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