Series Foreword: Classic Studies on the Apostolic Fathers
Preface: Adolf von Harnack and 1 Clement, by Jacob N. Cerone
Acknowledgments, by Jacob N. Cerone
Foreword: Harnack's Testament, by Larry Welborn
Preface
Introduction
1. The Transmission of the Letter
The Letter
2. The Author
3. Characteristics of the Letter and Its Religious Content
4. The Sources of Clementine-Roman Christianity
1. The Old Testament
2. Christ and the Christian
3. The Rational-Moralistic Idealism of the Age and Its Literary and
Aesthetic Forms
Excursus: The Political Stance
5. The Struggle in Corinth over the Ecclesiastical Officials and
the Order of the Office
Section I
Section II
Section III
Excursus: Is the Attitude of the Letter Specifically Roman?
6. Problems That Have not yet Been Conclusively Investigated Posed
by 1 Clement, Which Can Also Be Addressed in Seminars
7. A Look at the Development of Church History, Which the Letter
Grants and That Should Be Studied
8. Concluding Word
Notes
Appendix I: The Recently Discovered Latin Translation of 1
Clement
Appendix II: New Studies on the Recently Discovered Latin
Translation of 1 Clement
Appendix III: The First Letter of Clement: A Study to Determine the
Character of the Oldest Form of Gentile Christianity
Appendix IV: The Epithet "Servant of God" Used of Jesus and Its
History in the Ancient Church
Bibliography
Index to 1 Clement by Harnack
Index of Authors
Index of Subjects
Index of Ancient Sources
Adolf von Harnack (1851-1930) was a world-renowned professor of
church history at the Universities of Leipzig, Giessen, Marburg,
and Berlin. His works History of Dogma (1895-1900), What Is
Christianity? (1901), and New Testament Studies (1908-12) have left
their mark on studies of both church history and the New
Testament.
Jacob N. Cerone is a doctoral candidate at the University of
Erlangen-Nuremburg. He is the editor of Jörg Frey's Qumran, Early
Judaism, and New Testament Interpretation (2019) and the
Apostolic
Fathers Greek Reader: The Complete Edition (2019) and is a coeditor
of The Pericope of the Adulteress in Contemporary Research (2016).
Many of Harnack's analyses and insights into 1 Clement retain their
value in today's marketplace of historical inquiry. Cerone's adept
translation has done a great service to Anglophone scholarship, by
converting this wealth into usable currency. Critical readers will
discover a worthy return on investment.
Paul Hartog, Professor of Theology, Faith Baptist Theological
Seminary
Jacob Cerone's edition of Adolf von Harnack's seminal study of 1
Clement is an outstanding premiere to what promises to be an
impressive series, Classic Studies on the Apostolic Fathers. From
the characteristically erudite introduction to Harnack's essay by
Prof. Larry Welborn, to the smooth translation of Harnack's
influential 'farewell gift' to his church history students, to the
four still-valuable articles on 1 Clement by Harnack appended to
the essay, this volume shines with insight. For anyone interested
in 1 Clement - which should be any student of early Christianity -
this is a must-have volume.
David J. Downs, author of Alms: Charity, Reward, and Atonement in
Early Christianity
This fine little volume provides a clear and lucid rendering of a
classic German study not widely known and only rarely used by
English readers of 1 Clement. The vibrant contemporary style and
careful sensitivity to von Harnack's original emphasis is
admirable. Cerone's careful work is much appreciated, and serious
students of the Apostolic Fathers do well to have this publication
available for their own research.
Clayton N. Jefford, Professor of Scripture, Saint Meinrad Seminary
and School of Theology
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