The Cambridge Edition of Early Christian Writings
The Cambridge Edition of Early Christian Writings provides the definitive anthology of early Christian texts, from ca. 100 CE to ca. 650 CE. Its volumes reflect the cultural, intellectual, and linguistic diversity of early Christianity, and are organized thematically on the topics of God, Practice, Christ, and Community. The series expands the pool of source material to include not only Greek and Latin writings, but also Syriac and Coptic texts. Additionally, the series rejects a theologically normative view by juxtaposing texts that were important in antiquity but later deemed 'heretical' with orthodox texts. The translations are accompanied by introductions, notes, suggestions for further reading, and scriptural indices. The fifth and final volume focuses on the theme of community within early Christian writings-how Christians joined the community, how they managed the community, how they conceptualized the community, and how they policed the community. It will be an invaluable resource for students and academic researchers in early Christian studies, history of Christianity, theology and religious studies, and late antique Roman history.
- Provides fresh translations of previously translated texts
- Includes texts from a range of theological viewpoints, presenting a fair picture of the full range of early Christian diversity
- The series will be the definitive collection of early Christian texts for decades to come
Product details
June 2025Hardback
9781107062160
608 pages
235 × 161 × 35 mm
1.09kg
Not yet published - available from June 2025
Table of Contents
- Part I. Entering the Community:
- 1. Gregory of Nazianzus, oration 18.5–17, 'funeral oration for his father'
- 2. Augustine of Hippo, confessions 8
- 3. Augustine of Hippo, sermon 279, 'on Paul the Apostle', for the Solemnity of his conversion
- 4. Patrick of Ireland, confession
- Part II. Forming and Overseeing the Community:
- 5. Didache
- 6. Canons of the councils of Elvira and Arles
- 7. Gregory of Nazianzus, poem 2.1.12.25–47, 136–810, 'on himself and concerning the Bishops'
- 8. Gregory of Nazianzus, oration 43.1, 37–38, 43–53, 60–70, 77–80, 'funeral oration for Basil the great, Bishop of Cappadocian Caesarea'
- 9. Ambrose of Milan, letter 77 to his sister
- 10. Ambrose of Milan, letter outside the collection 1 to his sister
- 11. Selections from book 16 of the Theodosian code
- 12. Hilary of Arles, sermon on the life of saint Honoratus
- 13. The Monastic rules of Lérins and the counsels of Porcarius
- 14. Faustus of Riez, homily on saint Maximus, Bishop and Abbot
- 15. Shenoute of Atripe, I see your eagerness (discourses 5, work 1) and some kinds of people sift dirt and whoever seeks god will find (discourses 5, works 2 and 3)
- Part III. Imagining the Community:
- 16. Tertullian of Carthage, on repentance and on modesty 1–4, 21–22
- 17. Cyprian of Carthage, on the oneness of the Catholic church (second edition)
- 18. Augustine of Hippo, letter 87 to emeritus of Caesarea
- 19. Augustine of hippo, sermons 227–229
- 20. Pseudo-Dionysius, on the ecclesiastical hierarchy 1, 5–7
- Part IV. Policing the Community
- 21. Commodian, instructions
- 22. Tertullian of Carthage, on the shows
- 23. Maximus of Turin, sermons 105–108
- 24. John Chrysostom, first oration against the Jews
- 25. Callinicus, the life of our sacred father, Hypatius of the Rufinianae Prol
- 26. Socrates Scholasticus, ecclesiastical history
- 27. Caesarius of Arles, sermons 53 and 54
- Suggestions for further reading
- Scriptural index.