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Julian and Justinian and the Unity of Faith and Culture*
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 July 2009
Extract
The relationship—or lack of it—between religious belief and socalled secular culture is a topic which has been of perennial interest both to ancient students of religion and history and to modern historians. Students today use the phrase Unity of Faith and Culture because it has become current and because it bears some relationship to our own situation and problems, but we must also consider the subject, at least as we see it in antiquity, in terms of the interdependence or the interaction of faith and culture.
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- Copyright © American Society of Church History 1959
References
1. Kingston, F. Temple, “Classical Culture and the Wholeness of Faith,” Anglican Theological Review, XL (1958), pp. 26–36.Google Scholar
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12. See the study of Anastos, M. V., “The Immutability of Christ and Justinian's Condemnation of Theodore of Mopsuestia,” Dumbarton Oaks Papers, VI (1951), pp. 123–160CrossRefGoogle Scholar. Professor Anastos is preparing a monograph on the intellectual history of the reign of Justinian.
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15. veneranda vetustatis auctoritas (September 23, 3, p. 188, line 9 ed. Schoell-Kroll, Corpus iuris civilis); inculpabilis antiquitas (September 8, iusiurandum, ibid. p. 89, line 36).
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17. Cod. Just. 1.5.18.4; 1.11.10.2.
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19. As Bury (loc. cit., above, note 15) suggested.
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25. Florovsky, G., “Empire and Desert: Antinomies of Christian History,” Greek Orthodox Theological Review, III (1957), p. 143Google Scholar. The reader should note what Professor Plorovsky says (Ibid., pp. 141–142) on Justinian's conception of the Christian State.
26. Tsirintanes, A. N., Towards a Christian Civilization: A Draft Issued by the Christian Union of Professional Men of Greece (Athens, “Damascus” Publications, 1950), pp. 156–157.Google Scholar
27. See the present writer's article “The Byzantine Church and the Presentness of the Past,” Theolagy Today, XV (1958), pp. 84–99Google Scholar, also the review article “Byzantium and the Classical Tradition,” The Phoenix, XII (1958), pp. 125–129.Google Scholar
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