Augustine’s use of Philippians 2.6-7 as a ‘rule of faith’ employed to underscore pro-Nicene Christological concerns has been repeatedly emphasized, and rightly so, by Anglophone Augustine scholars. However, focus on the polemical function of the forma servi/forma dei couplet has overshadowed its presence and development in non-polemical contexts. This is surprising because Augustine treats the pericope in question outside of polemical contexts more so than otherwise. The present paper aims at redressing this lack by charting the non-polemical presence of Philippians 2.6-7 in the work of Augustine and the development vis-à-vis the term forma among Augustine’s immediate fourth century Latin predecessors. In so doing, this paper hopes to illus...
The doctrine of divine election is part of the heritage of Western Christianity. Discussions in the ...
The dispositio or arrangement which Augustine himself uses as a frame of reference in De doctrina ch...
The writings of the Church Fathers comprise by far the bulkiest corpus in extant Latin and Greek lit...
This article studies whether the theme of gratia fidei is present and thematised in the (pastoral) s...
The present article offers a synthetic and chronological analysis of Augustine's use of the Latin co...
In my article, I would like to point out the fact that Blessed Augustine rejects, in particular, the...
The incident at Antioch described in Galatians 2:11–14 features in a number of Augustine’s works: Ex...
Recently a scholarly debate has arisen concerning the (dis)continuity within Augustine's doctrine of...
In this chapter, the author examines the intersection of polemical exegesis and rhetorical praxis in...
The chapter is part of an edited volume that aims at providing a literary context and background to ...
The Bible is everywhere in Augustine’s 600 Sermones ad populum. Because they were preached in differ...
Scholars are still of the opinion that Augustine first started to read and discuss the Bible only on...
According to Jean P\ue9pin (Saint Augustin et la dialectique, Villanova: Villanova University Press,...
Scholars are still of the opinion that Augustine first started to read and discuss the Bible only o...
This thesis offers an alternative answer to a purported enigma, the meaning of ἁρπαγμόν in Philippia...
The doctrine of divine election is part of the heritage of Western Christianity. Discussions in the ...
The dispositio or arrangement which Augustine himself uses as a frame of reference in De doctrina ch...
The writings of the Church Fathers comprise by far the bulkiest corpus in extant Latin and Greek lit...
This article studies whether the theme of gratia fidei is present and thematised in the (pastoral) s...
The present article offers a synthetic and chronological analysis of Augustine's use of the Latin co...
In my article, I would like to point out the fact that Blessed Augustine rejects, in particular, the...
The incident at Antioch described in Galatians 2:11–14 features in a number of Augustine’s works: Ex...
Recently a scholarly debate has arisen concerning the (dis)continuity within Augustine's doctrine of...
In this chapter, the author examines the intersection of polemical exegesis and rhetorical praxis in...
The chapter is part of an edited volume that aims at providing a literary context and background to ...
The Bible is everywhere in Augustine’s 600 Sermones ad populum. Because they were preached in differ...
Scholars are still of the opinion that Augustine first started to read and discuss the Bible only on...
According to Jean P\ue9pin (Saint Augustin et la dialectique, Villanova: Villanova University Press,...
Scholars are still of the opinion that Augustine first started to read and discuss the Bible only o...
This thesis offers an alternative answer to a purported enigma, the meaning of ἁρπαγμόν in Philippia...
The doctrine of divine election is part of the heritage of Western Christianity. Discussions in the ...
The dispositio or arrangement which Augustine himself uses as a frame of reference in De doctrina ch...
The writings of the Church Fathers comprise by far the bulkiest corpus in extant Latin and Greek lit...