卡波克拉底、马塞利娜和埃皮法尼斯:亚历山大和罗马的三位早期基督教教师》,M. David Litwa 著(评论)

IF 0.5 3区 哲学 Q1 HISTORY
Warren Campbell
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引用次数: 0

摘要

以下是内容的简要摘录,以代替摘要:评论者: 卡波克拉底、马塞利娜和埃皮法尼斯:M. David Litwa Warren Campbell M. David Litwa Carpocrates, Marcellina, and Epiphanes:早期基督教世界的 Routledge 研究》,纽约:Routledge, 2022 第 244 页。42.43美元(平装本)/136.00美元(精装本)。早期基督教异端学在方法论上困难重重。阅读古代作家笔下的敌人很少是直截了当的,尤其是当前者声称后者利用恶魔作为助手时(爱任纽,Adv. haer. 1.13.3)。漫画与或多或少 "诚实 "地描述他人思想之间的界限在哪里?此外,我们还可以想象,那些文本经久不衰的作者(查士丁、爱任纽、良、克莱门特等)与那些在基督论上投入精力的对手(他们的文本往往只作为引文保存在上述幸存者中)之间存在着怎样的关系?戴维-利特瓦(M. David Litwa)的这本书将我们带入这些方法论挑战的核心,帮助我们理解二世纪早期罗马和亚历山大的三位基督教教师之间的知识兴趣和神学差异。卡波克拉底、马塞利娜和埃皮法尼斯》是一部评论性专著,研究了亚历山大的克莱门特、爱任纽以及埃皮法尼乌斯(其次是埃皮法尼乌斯)的著作是如何 "记住 "这三位人物的教诲的。第一章是对埃皮法尼乌斯的《论正义》的评论,也是本书的亮点。克莱门特在他的《Stromata》中说,埃皮法尼斯是卡波克拉底的儿子,他在 17 岁时就去世了,他在凯法利尼亚的萨米城被尊为神(Strom.3.2.5.2-3)。利特瓦对已故少年的崇拜的处理很有启发性,他将对埃皮法尼斯的生日祭祀和颂歌吟诵与公元前五世纪普罗克洛斯所证实的雅典人对柏拉图的生日颂歌,以及对托勒密五世的新月祭祀和年度祭祀放在一起,将其视为神灵的体现。利特瓦对《论正义》中四段引文的研究揭示了埃皮法尼斯对κοινωνία思想的复杂性:利用福音书中关于无差别神恩的传统,在文本中加入荷马史诗和赫西俄德关于太阳和人格化正义的思想,采用保罗的措辞,并运用斯多葛派的自然论证。第二章深入探讨了围绕父亲卡波克拉底和公元前 160 年代中期移居罗马的卡波克拉底同情者马塞利娜的传统。正如 Litwa 所述,(伪)贾斯汀-烈士的 Syntagma 的更新版后来被爱任纽使用,后者进一步塑造了该报告,而其他关于这两位教师的后期报告则出现在伪特土良的《反对各种异端邪说》、埃皮法尼乌斯的《Panarion》和菲拉斯提乌斯的《多种异端邪说》中,似乎源自三世纪早期的一份报告,即《三十二种异端邪说的 Syntagma》,该报告本身也借用了爱任纽的材料。Litwa 接着对这些报告进行了评论,其中包括一个四列的各种来源的文本,并优先考虑了爱任纽的内容。利特瓦理清了这些报告的脉络,并就卡波克拉底人 [第 137 页完] 的自我理解向这些报告追问可行的内容,这一点值得称赞。利特瓦用铅垂线划分的一个例子:卡尔波克拉底派被指控有天使创世的思想,但这一指控源于爱任纽认为他们是 "诺斯替派"。最后的核心章节描绘了所谓的《马可秘传福音》的复杂起源。1958 年,莫顿-史密斯声称在亚历山大的克莱门特的手稿中发现了 "秘密马可福音 "的引文,该手稿后来失传,只留下查尔斯-赫德里克在 20 世纪 90 年代末出版的几张照片。在这份被称为《西奥多书信》的片段中,克莱门特声称,马可在彼得死后,根据一组以耶稣的其他活动和教诲为特色的备忘录,插写了他的第一版《福音书》。这封书信声称,卡波克拉底哄骗了亚历山大的一位长老,让他给他带来了这份μυστικοῦ εὐαγγελίου的副本,他对副本进行了错误的解释,从而产生了卡波克拉底派的δόγμα。这封书信建议在与马可的联系问题上撒谎,并提供了支持这种高尚谎言的经文(2.12...
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Carpocrates, Marcellina, and Epiphanes: Three Early Christian Teachers of Alexandria and Rome by M. David Litwa (review)
In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:

Reviewed by:

  • Carpocrates, Marcellina, and Epiphanes: Three Early Christian Teachers of Alexandria and Rome by M. David Litwa
  • Warren Campbell
M. David Litwa
Carpocrates, Marcellina, and Epiphanes: Three Early Christian Teachers of Alexandria and Rome
Routledge Studies in the Early Christian World
New York: Routledge, 2022
Pp. 244. $42.43 (Paperback) / $136.00 (Hardback).

Early Christian heresiology is shot through with methodological difficulties. Reading ancient authors write about their enemies is rarely straightforward, especially when the former claim that the latter made use of demons as assistants (Irenaeus, Adv. haer. 1.13.3). Where is the line between caricature and a more or less "honest" description of another's ideas? Also, what kinds of relationships might we imagine between those whose texts have endured (Justin, Irenaeus, Tertullian, Clement, etc.) and their christologically invested rivals whose texts are often only preserved as quotations in these aforementioned survivors? M. David Litwa's book takes us to the heart of these methodological challenges and helps us understand the intellectual interests and theological variance between three Christian teachers from the early second century affiliated with Rome and Alexandria.

Carpocrates, Marcellina, and Epiphanes is a commentarial monograph that investigates how the teachings of these three figures are "remembered" in the writings of Clement of Alexandria, Irenaeus, and, to a lesser degree, Epiphanius. The first chapter is a commentary on Epiphanes's On Justice and a highlight of the book. In his Stromata, Clement says that Epiphanes was the son of Carpocrates, that he died at the age of seventeen, and that he is honored as a god in the city of Same in Cephallenia (Strom. 3.2.5.2–3). Litwa's treatment of the veneration of the deceased teenager is illuminating, situating the birthday sacrifice and hymnic recital to Epiphanes alongside the Athenian birthday hymns for Plato attested by Proclus in the fifth century c.e., as well as the new moon and yearly sacrifices to Ptolemy V as a manifestation of the divine. Litwa's engagement with the four quotations from On Justice reveals the complexity of Epiphanes's thinking on κοινωνία: working with gospel traditions about indiscriminate divine beneficence, sprinkling the text with Homeric and Hesiodic ideas about the Sun and personified Justice, adopting Pauline verbiage, and employing Stoic arguments from nature.

The second chapter delves into the traditions surrounding the father, Carpocrates, and Marcellina, a Carpocratian sympathizer who migrated to Rome in the mid-160s c.e. The reports twist and turn through multiple sources. As Litwa lays things out, an updated version of (pseudo-)Justin Martyr's Syntagma was subsequently used by Irenaeus, who further shaped the report, while other, later reports of the two teachers appear in pseudo-Tertullian's Against All Heresies, Epiphanius's Panarion, and Philastrius's Diverse Heresies and seem to derive from an early third-century report known as the Syntagma of Thirty-Two Heresies, which itself borrowed material from Irenaeus. Litwa proceeds to comment on these reports by including a four-columned text of the various sources, with priority given to the content in Irenaeus. Litwa should be commended for untangling the reports and pressing them for viable content regarding Carpocratian [End Page 137] self-understanding. One instance of Litwa's dividing plumb line: Carpocratians are charged with the idea of angelic creation, but this accusation stems from Irenaeus's conviction that they are "Gnostics".

The final core chapter maps the complex origins of the so-called Secret Gospel of Mark. In 1958, Morton Smith claimed to have discovered a quotation from "Secret Mark" in a manuscript of Clement of Alexandria that has subsequently been lost save for a few photographs published by Charles Hedrick in the late 1990s. In the fragment, known as the Epistle of Theodore, Clement claims that Mark interpolated the first version of his Gospel after the death of Peter according to a set of memoranda featuring additional activities and teachings of Jesus. The epistle claims that Carpocrates coaxed a presbyter from Alexandria to bring him a copy of this μυστικοῦ εὐαγγελίου, which he interpreted wrongly, thereby producing the δόγμα of the Carpocratians. The epistle recommends lying about the connection to Mark and offers scriptural texts in support of the noble lie (2.12...

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来源期刊
CiteScore
0.70
自引率
0.00%
发文量
33
期刊介绍: The official publication of the North American Patristics Society (NAPS), the Journal of Early Christian Studies focuses on the study of Christianity in the context of late ancient societies and religions from c.e. 100-700. Incorporating The Second Century (an earlier publication), the Journal publishes the best of traditional patristics scholarship while showcasing articles that call attention to newer themes and methodologies than those appearing in other patristics journals. An extensive book review section is featured in every issue.
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