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Cyril of Jerusalem, Mystagogue v. 17 : The Authorship of the ""Mystagogic Catecheses, Hardback Book

Cyril of Jerusalem, Mystagogue v. 17 : The Authorship of the ""Mystagogic Catecheses Hardback

Part of the Patristic Monograph Series series

Hardback

Description

After centuries of unresolved dispute over the question of whether the Mystagogic Catecheses belongs among the works of St.

Cyril of Jerusalem, this book finally settles the controversy.

These post-baptismal Easter sermons are a prized witness to the way the rites of initiation (baptism, confirmation, and Eucharist) were celebrated in fourth-century.

Jerusalem and for the rich sacramental theology they contain.

Uncertain authorship has prevented the text from being fully appreciated as an integral part of Cyril's works.

Cyril's reputation as a catechist is time-honored, and his Baptismal Catecheses has served as an invaluable source of early Church doctrine and practice.

Scholars can now confidently include the mystagogic sermons in their study of Cyril's doctrinal and sacramental theology and practice.

This study addresses much more than the question of authorship.

A thorough examination of the Mystagogic Catecheses in conjunction with Cyril's Baptismal Catecheses provides a new view into his life and thought as both catechist and mystagogue.

It begins with a survey of those aspects of Cyril's life and his Jerusalem church that are relevant to reassessing the authorship of the Mystagogic Catecheses.

It then examines the text's manuscript tradition, literary tradition, and date.

There follows the most extensive section, a comparative analysis of the disputed sermons and Cyril's Baptismal Catecheses in the areas of liturgical rites, theology, spirituality, and literary style.

The text is then compared to the known works of the contending author, John Il of Jerusalem.

Finally, the sermons are subjected to a stylometric analysis, that is, a computer-based statistical analysis of literary style.

This book will be welcomed by scholars of early Christianity, especially those interested in the life and works of Cyril of Jerusalem.

Of special interest is its treatment of the history and development of liturgy in the Christian East through the fourth century.

This is the first volume in the Patristic Monograph Series of the North American Patristic Society to be published by the Catholic University of America Press.

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