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Basil of Caesarea

Personal Information

Born March 7, 330
Died January 7, 379 (48 years old)
Kayseri, Ancient Rome
Also known as: Basil Saint, Basil, Saint, Bishop of Caesarea
21 books
4.5 (2)
38 readers

Description

An influential 4th century Christian theologian and monastic, and bishop of Caesarea Mazaca in [Cappadocia], Asia Minor (modern-day Turkey).

Books

Newest First

To students on Greek literature

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It is a letter by the Greek theologian Βασίλειος (a.k.a. St. Basil the Great) bishop of Καισάρεια / Caesarea (today Kayserli in Turkey) about how should young christians study the paganistic culture of their greek ancestors, without succubing to the charm (and superiority) of the very elaborate philosophy of ancient (or rather late antiquity) greek religion.

The letters

5.0 (1)
2

Is there any mystery greater than those we love the most? In this remarkable collaboration, New York Times bestselling author Luanne Rice and Joseph Monninger combine their unique talents to create a powerfully moving novel of an estranged husband and wife through a series of searching, intimate letters. By way of a correspondence so achingly real you'll forget it's fiction, they trace the history of a love affair and of a family before, and after, the moment that changed the course of two people's journey forever. Sam and Hadley West are both trying in their own ways to survive after the unthinkable loss of their only son in Alaska. For Sam, a sports journalist, acceptance means an arduous trek by dogsled across the bleak and beautiful arctic wilderness to find the place where Paul died. For Hadley, it means renting a benignly haunted, salt-soaked cottage off the Maine coast where she begins to paint again. Now, at opposite ends of the country, waiting for their divorce to be finalized, they begin to exchange letters by post, missives filled with longing and truths they've never before voiced, as they recall their marriage--its magic moments and its challenges--and begin to rediscover the reasons they fell in love in the first place. As Sam risks his life to reach the remote crash site, Hadley begins an equally hazardous inner journey to a rendezvous with the mad grief of a mother's heart. At the place where all else is lost, they will meet again....From the Hardcover edition.

Against Eunomius

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In this treatise, Basil attempts to articulate a theology both of God's unitary essence and of the distinctive features that characterize the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit-a distinction that some hail as the cornerstone of "Cappadocian" theology. In Against Eunomius, we see the clash not simply of two dogmatic positions on the doctrine of the Trinity, but of two fundamentally opposed theological methods. Basil's treatise is as much about how theology ought to be done and what human beings can and cannot know about God as it is about the exposition of Trinitarian doctrine. Thus Against Eunomius marks a turning point in the Trinitarian debates of the fourth century, for the first time addressing the methodological and epistemological differences that gave rise to theological differences. Amidst the polemical vitriol of Against Eunomius is a call to epistemological humility on the part of the theologian, a call to recognize the limitations of even the best theology.