
Commentarii in epistulas ad Corinthios H. J. Vogels duas recensiones discernendas cognovit, quae quidem minus inter se differant quam recensiones commentarii in epistulam ad Romanos.
Corpus Scriptorum Ecclesiasticorum Latinorum - Wikipedia
The Corpus Scriptorum Ecclesiasticorum Latinorum (CSEL) is an academic series that publishes critical editions of Latin works by late-antique Christian authors. There are about 100 volumes in the series; …
Corpus Scriptorum Ecclesiasticorum Latinorum - CSEL
Jan 1, 2020 · Digital library of late-antique Latin texts (non-Christian authors, free access but registration required). All subsequent volumes are still in copyright.
Ambrosiaster
Though the work of Ambrosiaster does not, from an antiquarian standpoint, belong to the most interesting relics of Christian antiquity, its exegesis 153 is often valuable, distinguished by soberness, …
CSEL – CSEL
Ambrosiaster, Commentarius in epistulas Paulinas (ad Galatas, ad Efesios, ad Filippenses, ad Colosenses, ad Thesalonicenses, ad Timotheum, ad Titum, ad Filemonem) - ed. H. J. Vogels 1969, …
Ambrosiaster’s Commentary on the Pauline Epistles: Romans. Writings ...
Once completed by the second volume of commentaries, this work will be an indispensable tool for those interested in the history of exegesis of the Pauline Epistles, as well as for specialists working …
Ambrosiaster: Commentary on Romans 1:26-28, Recensions α, β, γ
CSEL vol 81.1, ed HJ Vogels, 1966. The following four pages are a few verses from the most recently published texts of Ambrosiaster's Commentary on Romans. Over the course of his life, and in …
Who was Ambrosiaster and what did he write? - Bible Hub
Ambrosiaster’s chief work consists of a comprehensive commentary on the Pauline Epistles, excluding Hebrews in most manuscripts. This commentary is among the earliest extant Latin expositions …
Ambrosiaster's Commentary on the Pauline Epistles: Romans on JSTOR
It is unsurprising that in the Commentary Ambrosiaster frequently casts aspersion on the beliefs and practices of pagans, Jews, and heretical Christians, when the Pauline epistles themselves regularly …
We are grateful to John T. Fitzgerald, general editor of the series Writ-ings from the Greco-Roman World, not only for engaging us to prepare a translation of Ambrosiaster’s Commentary on the …