The purpose of this article was to compare Jerome’s and Augustine’s sermons on the fifth book of the Psalms with regard to their views on the rich and the poor. After a brief consideration of the different audiences of Jerome and Augustine, we focused on their attitudes to wealth and poverty, and almsgiving and its relationship to eschatology. In both Jerome’s and Augustine’s commentaries we were confronted with problems regarding the nature of the collections, the composition of the audiences, and a lack of overlap between the two works, but it was possible to discern congruences and differences in their exegesis. In their preaching on poverty and riches, both homilists associated Judas with the devil and wealth. With regard to the ...
This article explores the origins of the earliest Jerusalem believers’ communal lifestyle (Acts 1:13...
This article will compare the treatment of the order of charity to neighbor in Saint Augustine of Hi...
This innovative volume focuses on the significance of early Christianity for modern means of address...
This article is an investigation into what the Letter of James communicates to the reader regarding ...
This paper examines how Greek Christian authors engaged with the topics of poverty and wealth during...
The article presents how three great Alexandrian writers (Clemens, Origen and Didymus the Blind) est...
Augustine’s sermons provide a unique source in explaining his influence from the 5th century onwards...
The present study considers the degree to which John’s portrayal of the faithful Christian community...
The Enarrationes in Psalmos is the collection of Augustine’s commentaries and sermons on the Psalms....
This article deals with the double biblical worldview about poverty: as a social context one is not ...
The question of Christian almsgiving in late antiquity is one that has received fresh treatment rece...
<p>Since the psalms are religious, poetic, existential expressions of life, entailing both ext...
Quis Dives Salvetur (QDS) is a small but fascinating homiletic treatise composed by Clement of Alexa...
This thesis starts with questions over Luke's idea of the relation between wealth and discipleship. ...
Christianity is not always anti-wealth per se but has much to say about the use of wealth for common...
This article explores the origins of the earliest Jerusalem believers’ communal lifestyle (Acts 1:13...
This article will compare the treatment of the order of charity to neighbor in Saint Augustine of Hi...
This innovative volume focuses on the significance of early Christianity for modern means of address...
This article is an investigation into what the Letter of James communicates to the reader regarding ...
This paper examines how Greek Christian authors engaged with the topics of poverty and wealth during...
The article presents how three great Alexandrian writers (Clemens, Origen and Didymus the Blind) est...
Augustine’s sermons provide a unique source in explaining his influence from the 5th century onwards...
The present study considers the degree to which John’s portrayal of the faithful Christian community...
The Enarrationes in Psalmos is the collection of Augustine’s commentaries and sermons on the Psalms....
This article deals with the double biblical worldview about poverty: as a social context one is not ...
The question of Christian almsgiving in late antiquity is one that has received fresh treatment rece...
<p>Since the psalms are religious, poetic, existential expressions of life, entailing both ext...
Quis Dives Salvetur (QDS) is a small but fascinating homiletic treatise composed by Clement of Alexa...
This thesis starts with questions over Luke's idea of the relation between wealth and discipleship. ...
Christianity is not always anti-wealth per se but has much to say about the use of wealth for common...
This article explores the origins of the earliest Jerusalem believers’ communal lifestyle (Acts 1:13...
This article will compare the treatment of the order of charity to neighbor in Saint Augustine of Hi...
This innovative volume focuses on the significance of early Christianity for modern means of address...