Athanasius and AsceticismJohns Hopkins Univsersity Press David Brakke ISBN: 0801860555 price: $21.95 paperback
It is often assumed that early Christian asceticism drew its
followers completely away from worldly concerns into the realm of
pure spirituality. But the life and thought of Athanasius, Bishop
of Alexandria (AD 328-73), shows just how worldly -- and deeply
political -- ascetic theology could be. David Brakke examines
this important church leader's efforts to reconcile asceticism's
compelling intensity with the more conventional needs of the
families and everyday believers on whom the Church relied for
support and stability. Brakke describes how Athanasius joined
with other fourth century bishops to create a strongly unified
Christian church in Egypt, bringing both the solitary monks of
the desert and the female ascetics in the cities under church
authority by organizing them into auxiliaries of the emerging
local parishes. By carefully integrating ascetic values and
practices into a comprehensive vision of the church as a heavenly
commonwealth, Brakke argues, Athanasius unified a community of
Christians practicing diverse versions of their faith and helped
to establish the lines of administrative and pastoral authority
that would be essential to the church's future success. This
illuminating study of the turmoil of fourth century Christianity
also includes the first English translations of many of
Athanasius's ascetic and pastoral writings
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