R.A. Markus
Born
in Budapest, Hungary
October 08, 1924
Died
December 08, 2010
Genre
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The End of Ancient Christianity (Canto original series)
2 editions
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published
1990
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Saeculum: History and Society in the Theology of St Augustine
6 editions
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published
1970
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Gregory the Great and his World
10 editions
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published
1997
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Signs and Meanings: World and Text in Ancient Christianity
6 editions
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published
1996
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Christianity in the Roman world
4 editions
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published
1974
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Neoplatonism and early Christian thought: Essays in honour of A.H. Armstrong
by
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published
1981
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Augustine: A Collection of Critical Essays
2 editions
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published
1972
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Sacred and Secular: Studies on Augustine and Latin Christianity
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published
1994
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From Augustine to Gregory the Great
2 editions
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published
1983
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Bede and the Tradition of Ecclesiastical Historiography
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“But for man's primal sin and fall from the condition of grace there would have been no need for God's saving work. Both sacred history in particular and history itself as experienced by men arise from this primal tragedy. This is the source of the 'river of human history,' the _series calamitatis_, the _res humana_ which flows like a river...History in the full sense, as the troubled past of the human race, is the consequence of a world plunged into the ambivalence of time; time as the vehicle of sin and tragedy as well as the medium of redemption. History in general, the troubled careers of men, societies and their institutions, as well as sacred history, the unfolding of God's plan for healing man's fallen condition, both arise from this primordial strain in the human situation. Temporality itself is involved in being crated; but temporality falls short of historicity. Historicity is the mark of a world in which there is _nihil solidum, nihil stabile_. Man therefore creates a historical situation for himself in the very same act in which he provides God with an opportunity to exercise within human history his saving work.”
― Saeculum: History and Society in the Theology of St Augustine
― Saeculum: History and Society in the Theology of St Augustine
“But for man's primal sin and fall from the condition of grace there would have been no need for God's saving work. Both sacred history in particular and history itself as experienced by men arise from this primal tragedy. This is the source of the 'river of human history,' the series calamitatis, the res humana which flows like a river...History in the full sense, as the troubled past of the human race, is the consequence of a world plunged into the ambivalence of time; time as the vehicle of sin and tragedy as well as the medium of redemption. History in general, the troubled careers of men, societies and their institutions, as well as sacred history, the unfolding of God's plan for healing man's fallen condition, both arise from this primordial strain in the human situation. Temporality itself is involved in being crated; but temporality falls short of historicity. Historicity is the mark of a world in which there is nihil solidum, nihil stabile. Man therefore creates a historical situation for himself in the very same act in which he provides God with an opportunity to exercise within human history his saving work.”
― Saeculum: History and Society in the Theology of St Augustine
― Saeculum: History and Society in the Theology of St Augustine
“But for man's primal sin and fall from the condition of grace there would have been no need for God's saving work. Both sacred history in particular and history itself as experienced by men arise from this primal tragedy. This is the source of the 'river of human history,' the series calamitatis, the res humana which flows like a river...History in the full sense, as the troubled past of the human race, is the consequence of a world plunged into the ambivalence of time; time as the vehicle of sin and tragedy as well as the medium of redemption. History in general, the troubled careers of men, societies and their institutions, as well as sacred history, the unfolding of God's plan for healing man's fallen condition, both arise from this primordial strain in the human situation. Temporality itself is involved in being created; but temporality falls short of historicity. Historicity is the mark of a world in which there is nihil solidum, nihil stabile. Man therefore creates a historical situation for himself in the very same act in which he provides God with an opportunity to exercise within human history his saving work.”
― Saeculum: History and Society in the Theology of St Augustine
― Saeculum: History and Society in the Theology of St Augustine
Topics Mentioning This Author
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The History Book ...: * ROMANS AND THE CHRISTIANS | 31 | 410 | Aug 25, 2021 06:17PM |