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Philosophy, Hagiology and the Early Byzantine Origins of Purgatory

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  21 March 2016

Matthew J. Dal Santo*
Affiliation:
Trinity College, Cambridge

Extract

On 8 June 1438, the Council of Ferrara-Florence began proceedings aimed at the reunion of the Eastern and Western Churches. One of the first issues discussed was the Latin doctrine of purgatory. This article examines a particular moment in the divergence of eschatological doctrine between the Latin, Greek and Syriac Churches – indeed, representatives of the West Syrian ‘Jacobites’ and East Syrian ‘Nestorians’ were at Ferrara too. It argues that a debate concerning the post mortem activity of the saints proved crucial for the formation of various Christian eschatological orthodoxies. The catalyst for this debate was the sixth-century revival of Aristotelian philosophy, especially Aristotelian psychology which emphasized the soul’s dependence on the body. This threatened the cult of the saints and the Church’s sacramental ‘care of the dead’. Defenders of the hagiological and cultic status quo rejected Aristotle’s claims and asserted the full post mortem activity of the soul after separation from the body by developing a novel doctrine of immediate post mortem judgement. This led to the formulation of eschatological opinions which, if not normative in their day, came to be considered so by later generations. One of these ideas was post mortem purgation.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Ecclesiastical History Society 2009

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References

1 For Greek-Latin debates leading up to Florence-Ferrara, see Dagron, G., ‘La perception d’une différence: les débuts de la “Querelle du purgatoire”’, in 15 e Congrès international des études byzantines: Actes 4 (Athens, 1976), 8489 Google Scholar, repr. in Dagron, G., La romanité chrétienne en Orient (London, 1984)Google Scholar, ch. 13.

2 On the ‘Nestorians’, see Brock, S., The “Nestorian” Church: A Lamentable Misnomer’, BJRL 78 (1996), 2335 Google Scholar. Syriac refers to the liturgical language which was common to both the West Syrian church, whose Christology tended to emphasize Christ’s single divine-human nature (and has been labelled Miaphysite, Monophysite or anti-Chalcedonian), and the East Syrian (’Nestorian’) church, whose Antiochene Christology emphasized the distinct properties of Christ’s separate divine and human natures.

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13 Phil. 1: 23.

14 Dial. 4.26.2 (SC 265: 84).

15 2 Cor. 5: 1. Eustratius employed the same biblical authorities to defend the same proposition: De stat. (CChr.SG 60: 719–28, 733–38). See Dal Santo,‘Gregory the Great’.

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25 See Dial. 4.26.

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