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On the Apostolic Tradition (St. Vladimir's Seminary Press "Popular Patristics" Series)
Hippolytus, Antipope | Alistair Stewart-Sykes | Antipope, ca. 170-235 or 6 Hippolytus

On the Apostolic Tradition (St. Vladimir's Seminary Press "Popular Patristics" Series)

St. Vladimir's Seminary Press (2001)
0881412333
| Hardcover
222 pages | 127 x 183 mm | English
$ 16.00 | Value: $ 16.00
Dewey 270.1
LC Classification BR196.2

Subject

  • Canon law
  • Christian life - Early works to 1800
  • Church history - Sources
  • Church orders, Ancient

Plot

Apostolic Tradition, as this text is best known, was identified in the early years of the twentieth century as the work of Hippolytus, a Christian leader from third-century Rome. The text provides liturgical information of great antiquity, and as such has been massively influential on liturgical study and reform, especially in western churches.

Nonetheless, there have been a number of problems surrounding the text. The attribution to Hippolytus has never been universally accepted; much of the text remained obscure, published without commentary; finally, no adequate English version has been published since 1937. On the Apostolic Tradition seeks to solve these problems. The introduction brings the debate concerning authorship to a new level while the rest of the text is accompanied by lucid commentary. Together with a fresh translation, the book brings light to formerly obscure passages, clears critical impasses and provides new discoveries. It is a significant and important piece of research, enlightening and eminently readable.

Alistair Stewart-Sykes is a leading scholar of Christian liturgical origins. The author of numerous books and articles on early Christianity and its liturgy, he had retired from teaching and is a vicar in the Diocese of Salisbury, England.

On the Apostolic Tradition is part of the POPULAR PATRISTIC SERIES.