ISBN-13: 9780199205554 / Angielski / Twarda / 2007 / 294 str.
ISBN-13: 9780199205554 / Angielski / Twarda / 2007 / 294 str.
A historical and theological re-evaluation of the polemical writings of Athanasius of Alexandria (bishop 328-73), who would become known to later Christian generations as a saint and a champion of orthodoxy, and as the defender of the original Nicene Creed of 325 against the Arian heresy'. For much of his own lifetime, however, Athanasius was an extremely controversial figure, and his writings, although highly influential on modern interpretations of the fourth-century Church and the so-called Arian Controversy', display bias and distortion . David M. Gwynn examines Athanasius' polemic in detail, and in particular his construction of those he condemns as Arian' as a single heretical party', 'the Eusebians'. Gwynn argues that Athanasius' image of the Church polarized between his own orthodoxy' and the Arianism' of the Eusebians' is a polemical construct, which has seriously impaired our knowledge of the development of Christianity in the crucial period in which the Later Roman Empire became ever increasingly a Christian empire.