1-2 Corinthians: Ancient Christian Commentary on Scripture, NT Volume 7 [ACCS]
Stock No: WW824922
1-2 Corinthians: Ancient Christian Commentary on Scripture, NT Volume 7 [ACCS]   -     Edited By: Gerald Bray, Thomas C. Oden

1-2 Corinthians: Ancient Christian Commentary on Scripture, NT Volume 7 [ACCS]

InterVarsity Press / Hardcover

Due in Shortly. Expected to ship on or about 11/21/25.
Email me when this product is available.
Stock No: WW824922

Buy Item Our Price$49.19 Retail: $79.99 Save 39% ($30.80)
Due in Shortly. Expected to ship on or about 11/21/25.
Email me when this product is available.
Quantity:
Stock No: WW824922
InterVarsity Press / Hardcover
Quantity:

Add To Cart

or checkout with

Add To Wishlist
eBook Our Price$42.86 View Details
Quantity:


Add To Cart

or checkout with

Wishlist

Other Formats (2)
Select this Item Product Title/Author Availability Price Quantity
$49.19
Due in Shortly. Expected to ship on or about 11/21/25.
Our Price$49.19
Retail: $79.99
Add To Cart
$49.19
$42.86
In Stock
Our Price$42.86
Retail: $74.99
Add To Cart
Quantity for eBook0
$42.86
Others Also Purchased (1)

Product Description

Paul's Letters to the Corinthian Church have left a mark on Christian Scripture in a way that could never have been predicted. Here the pastoral issues of a first century Christian community in what identified as "still the first city in Greece" stand out in bold relief.

How was a community shaped by the cross to find its expression in a city that Chrysostom knew to be full of orators and philosophers" and that "prided itself above all on its wealth"? How was church unity to be maintained in a setting where predominate believers, bending truth and morality to their own advantage, divided the body of Christ? Here lay the challenge for the apostle Paul. And as the apostle writes, the fathers lean over his shoulder, marveling and commenting on his pastoral wisdom.

Best known among the patristic commentators is Chrysostom, whose twenty-seven homilies on the two Corinthian Epistles are a treasury of exposition and application. The fragmentary works of Didymus the Blind and Severian of Gabala give us samples of Greek exegesis from the Alexandrian and Antiochene schools.

The partial work of Theodore of Mopsuestia, a commentator of great skill and insight was long valued in the church. And the comments of Theodoret of Cyr are notable for their sensitivity to the intertextuality of Scripture. Then there are Origen and Pelagius, whose names resonate with notable error to the needless obscuring of their brilliant insights into Scripture.

But pride of place goes to the unknown forth-century commentator long mistaken for Ambrose and now dubbed Ambrosiaster. His excellent commentary on 1&2 Corinthians has been unavailable in English translation, and for that reason his commentary is excerpted more generously in this volume.

This Ancient Christian Commentaryon 1-2 Corinthians opens a whole new way of reading these New Testament texts. The pastoral and theological interpretation of the fathers offers spiritual and intellectual sustenance to those who would read Paul again with open minds and hearts. Here we find the Pauline wisdom of the cross generating an effective heritage of Christian interpretation.

Product Information

Title: 1-2 Corinthians: Ancient Christian Commentary on Scripture, NT Volume 7 [ACCS]
Format: Hardcover
Number of Pages: 349
Vendor: InterVarsity Press
Dimensions: 10.00 X 7.00 (inches)
Weight: 1 pound 15 ounces
ISBN: 0830824928
ISBN-13: 9780830824922
Series: Ancient Christian Commentary on Scripture
Stock No: WW824922

Publisher's Description

In Paul's letters to the Corinthian church, the pastoral issues of a first-century Christian community stand out in bold relief. And as the apostle responds to these challenges, the fathers lean over his shoulder, marveling and commenting on his pastoral wisdom.Best known among these patristic commentators is Chrysostom, whose seventy-seven homilies on the two Corinthian epistles are a treasury of exposition and application. The fragmentary works of Didymus the Blind and Severian of Gabala give us samples of Greek exegesis from the Alexandrian and Antiochene schools. The partial work of Theodore of Mopsuestia was long valued in the church, and the comments of Theodoret of Cyr are notable for their sensitivity to the intertextuality of Scripture. Then there are Origen and Pelagius, whose notable errors need not obscure their brilliant insights into Scripture. But pride of place in this volume goes to the unknown fourth-century commentator now dubbed Ambrosiaster. His excellent commentary on 1 and 2 Corinthians was previously unavailable in English translation.This Ancient Christian Commentary on Scripture volume opens a whole new way of reading these New Testament texts. The pastoral and theological interpretation of the fathers offers spiritual and intellectual sustenance to those who would read Paul again with open minds and hearts.

Author Bio

Gerald L. Bray (PhD, La Sorbonne) is a professor at Beeson Divinity School of Samford University in Birmingham, Alabama, and director of research at Latimer Trust. He has written and edited a number of books on different theological subjects, including Galatians, Ephesians in the Reformation Commentary on Scripture series, Biblical Interpretation: Past and Present, and The Doctrine of God. A priest of the Church of England, Bray has also edited the post-Reformation Anglican canons.


Thomas C. Oden (1931–2016) was a pioneering theologian and served as the architect and general editor for the Ancient Christian Commentary on Scripture. He was also the general editor of the Ancient Christian Doctrine series and the Ancient Christian Devotional series, as well as a consulting editor for the Encyclopedia of Ancient Christianity. A prolific writer and seasoned teacher, Oden also served as the director of the Center for Early African Christianity at Eastern University in Pennsylvania and was active in the Confessing Movement in America, particularly within the United Methodist Church.

Editorial Reviews

"This volume continues the valuable exploration of patristic interpretation."

-- Mark Bilby, Religious Studies Review, September 2009

"A 'must' for all theological libraries."

-- International Review of Biblical Studies, Vol. 55, 2008-2009

"A wealth of information for the classic Bible scholar."

-- Ravonne A. Green, American Reference Books Annual, 2006, Volume 37

"Contemporary Christians would do well to draw the hermeneutical circle broadly enough to include not only cross-cultural voices from around the world but also the voices to be found in the Ancient Christian Commentary series. This is an excellent sermon-preparation resource for pastors."

-- Christian Century, May 2, 2006

"All who are interested in the interpretation of the Bible will welcome the forthcoming multivolume series Ancient Christian Commentary on Scripture. Here the insights of scores of early church fathers will be assembled and made readily available for significant passages throughout the Bible and the Apocrypha. It is hard to think of a more worthy ecumenical project to be undertaken by InterVarsity Press."

-- Bruce M. Metzger, professor emeritus of New Testament, Princeton Theological Seminary

"For those who think that church history began around 1941, when their pastor was born, this commentary will be a great surprise. Christians throughout the centuries have read the biblical text and nursed their spirits with it and then applied it to their lives. These commentaries reflect that the witness of the Holy Spirit was present in his church throughout the centuries. As a result, we can profit by allowing the ancient Christians to speak to us today."

-- Haddon Robinson, Harold John Ockenga Distinguished Professor of Preaching, Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary

"There is no shortage of new books on the market and it may be a surprise to some to see IVP producing the Ancient Christian Commentary on Scripture series. But, bearing in mind C. S. Lewis's admonition, 'It is a good rule, after reading a new book, never to allow yourself another new one till you have read an old one in between,' this series will fill a great need that many of us may not even be aware of--the need to read those who have gone before us."

-- D. Stuart Briscoe

"We speak abstractly in scholarly circles of the need to transcend looking at Christianity through the spectrum of modern presuppositions. This series, based on the commentaries of early Christians, gives us a concrete way to do this. It's a great idea."

-- Don S. Browning, Alexander Campbell Professor of Ethics and Social Sciences, The Divinity School, University of Chicago

"The Scriptures have been read with love and attention for nearly two thousand years, and listening to the voice of believers from previous centuries opens us to unexpected insight and deepened faith. Those who studied Scripture in the centuries closest to its writing, the centuries during and following persecution and martyrdom, speak with particular authority. The Ancient Christian Commentary on Scripture will bring to life the truth that we are invisibly surrounded by a great cloud of witnesses."

-- Frederica Mathewes-Green, commentator, National Public Radio

"Composed in the style of the great medieval catenae, this new anthology of patristic commentary on Holy Scripture, conveniently arranged by chapter and verse, will be a valuable resource for prayer, study and proclamation. By calling attention to the rich Christian heritage preceding the separations between East and West and between Protestant and Catholic, this series will perform a major service to the cause of ecumenism."

-- Avery Dulles, S. J., Laurence J. McGinley Professor of Religion and Society, Fordham University

Ask a Question

Author/Artist Review