Jobst Reller and Martin Tamcke, eds. Trinitäts- und Christusdogma. Ihre Bedeutung für Beten und Handeln der Kirche. Festschrift für Jouko Martikainen. Studien zur Orientalischen Kirchengeschichte 12. Münster, Hamburg, and London: LIT-Verlag, 2001. Pp. 265. ISBN 3-8258-5278-4. Paperback. Euros 20.90.
Cornelia B.
Horn
Beth Mardutho: The Syriac Institute
George A. Kiraz
James E. Walters
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Beth Mardutho: The Syriac Institute
2007
Vol. 10, No. 1
For this publication, a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International
license has been granted by the author(s), who retain full
copyright.
https://hugoye.bethmardutho.org/article/hv10n1prhorn
Cornelia B. Horn
Jobst Reller and Martin Tamcke, eds. Trinitäts- und Christusdogma. Ihre Bedeutung für Beten und Handeln der Kirche. Festschrift für Jouko Martikainen. Studien zur Orientalischen Kirchengeschichte 12. Münster, Hamburg, and London: LIT-Verlag, 2001. Pp. 265. ISBN 3-8258-5278-4. Paperback. Euros 20.90.
https://hugoye.bethmardutho.org/pdf/vol10/HV10N1PRHorn.pdf
Hugoye: Journal of Syriac Studies
Beth Mardutho: The Syriac Institute,
vol 10
issue 1
Hugoye: Journal of Syriac Studies is an electronic journal dedicated to the study
of the Syriac tradition, published semi-annually (in January and July) by Beth
Mardutho: The Syriac Institute. Published since 1998, Hugoye seeks to offer the
best scholarship available in the field of Syriac studies.
Syriac Studies
Festschrift
Jouko Martikainen
File created by XSLT transformation of original HTML encoded article.
[1] This
collection of essays by colleagues and students was dedicated
to Jouko Martikainen as a Festschrift on the occasion of
his 65th birthday. From 1984 until 2001 Martikainen held the
position of Professor of the History of Oriental Christianity
at the Georg-August University in Göttingen, Germany. A
native of Valtimo, Finland, and a member of the Lutheran
Church, Martikainen became known through his work on Ephraem
the Syrian, Philoxenus of Mabbug, and John I Sedra, as well as
through his collaboration and editorial involvement with the
German-Finnish symposia on Makarios.
[2] Of the
15 contributions contained in the volume, six articles that
form the initial section of the book concentrate on topics that
are of more immediate interest to scholars of Syriac Studies.
Enhancing and attempting to further modern ecumenical dialogue
between the Orthodox Church, the Oriental Orthodox Church, and
the Apostolic Church of the East, Wolfgang Hage
(“Chambésy 1990 und zwei syrische Stimmen aus dem
Mittelalter,” pp. 9-20) offers a discussion of the
reconciliatory potential of the approach to fellow Christian
denominations that was advanced in the Middle Ages by the
Syrian-orthodox theologian and polymath Gregory Barhebraeus (d.
1286). Instead of condemning Christians from the Chalcedonian
Orthodox side or from the Church of the East, Barhebraeus chose
not to include members of these churches in the catalogue of
heresies that he presented in the Christological section of his
“Book of the Candelabra of the Sanctuary.” For the
time prior to Barhebraeus, Hage can cite Timothy I (d. 823),
Catholicos-Patriarch of the Church of the East, as another
voice that was able to speak in a reconciliatory manner,
despite the growing experience of competition between the
Syriac Orthodox Church and the Church of the East that
manifested itself at the time.
[3] Karl
Merten (“Aussagen syrisch-orthodoxer Christen zu ihrem
Glauben während ihres Asylverfahrens,” pp. 21-32)
examines a legal file of statements made by 1345 Syrian
Orthodox Christians and a few additional Christians who belong
to other denominations, all of whom applied for asylum in
Germany between 1978 and 1994. Although most of the responses
did not reflect a nuanced knowledge of the Christian faith, it
is remarkable that in several cases the little that people knew
combined with a deep conviction of the truth of their religion
and their willingness to give their lives for it. However, the
lack of factual knowledge of their faith points to two areas
that need further development: that of increased efforts on the
part of Church officials in the realm of catechesis, and that
of greater freedom of religion to be granted to religious
minorities by Turkey.
[4] Matthias
Quaschning-Kirsch (“... so daß wir durch Ihn ein
Wohlduft sind! Der Phönix als christologisches und
paränetisches Symbol im syrischen Physiologus,” pp.
33-49) examines the manifold aspects of a Christological
interpretation of the mythological phoenix in the two Syriac
recensions of the Physiologus. The author helpfully
contextualizes the material against the background of
recensions in Greek and further oriental Christian
languages.
[5] Gabriel
Rabo (“Der Kirchenbau und seine innere Ausstattung in der
syrisch-orthodoxen Kirche,” pp. 51-65) offers some data
on early literary attestations and comments on church building
activities and churches in the Syriac tradition. The second
part of the essay, which constitutes the main portion of the
work, presents a detailed description of individual parts of
the interior space of a Syriac church, i.e., of sanctuary,
chancel, and nave.
[6] Jobst
Reller (“Zur Deutung des Heilswerkes Christi in der
syrischsprachigen Paulinenauslegung von Johannes Chrysostomos
über Mose bar Kepha bis Dionysius bar Salibi,” pp.
67-90) offers a discussion of the contribution of Syriac
thought to soteriology that developed on the basis of the
interpretation of Paul’s Letters from the fifth through
the 12th centuries. John Chrysostom’s
interpretation of Romans 7 and 12.1-3, which are dealt with in
Homilies on Romans 13 and 21, provide the starting point
among the Fathers. Also Theodore of Mopsuestia was a strong
influence on later commentators from the
8th-12th centuries. Reflecting the
Protestant interest of the investigator and the honoree, Reller
focuses his investigation on the themes of baptism, the
inability of the Law to bring about salvation, and reflections
on the inability even of the redeemed human being to overcome
sin completely.
[7] The
sixth and final contribution of this volume that treats themes
that are of immediate interest to Syriac Studies is an article
by Martin Tamcke (“Gedankensplitter zu Gotteslehre und
Gottesbild in den ostsyrischen Mönchsregeln am Ende des 6.
Jahrhunderts,” pp. 91-101), that attempts to trace
thoughts on God in East Syrian asceticism between the years 588
and 604. The essay examines in turn ascetic Rules by
Dadisho’, successor of Abraham of Kashkar as abbot of the
Great Monastery on Mount Izla, the Covenant of the
Monastery of Barqita, and comments made in a Letter by
Sabrisho’ to the Monks of Barqita. Neither one of the
documents offers a coherent, systematic teaching De deo.
All three feature a strong sense of God as judge. The documents
differ from one another with regard to their emphasis on how to
employ rational thought when approaching God and when to allow
the self to be carried away by emotions.
[8]
Subsequent articles deal with further themes in the fields of
Biblical Theology (Jukka Thurén [“Johannes als
Monotheist,” pp. 253-265]), Greek Patristics and History
of the early Church (Jürgen Kielisch [“Die
Trinität in den fünf Theologischen Reden des Gregor
von Nazianz,” pp. 129--146]), Interreligious Dialogue
(Martti Vaahtoranta [“Lutherische Messe und Gebet in der
Moschee. Die christliche und islamische Gottesdienstgemeinde im
Blick auf die Lehre von der Einheit Gottes--ein Versuch,
richtige Fragen zu stellen,” pp. 103-128]), Philosophy of
Religions (Hans-Olof Kvist [“Grundsätzliches zum
christlichen Sprachgebrauch in Immanuel Kants
Religionsdenken,” pp. 147-161]), Historical Theology
(Hans-Walter Krumwiede [“Nachfolge und Widerstand. Ein
Beitrag zur Christologie Dietrich Bonhoeffers,” pp.
163-194], Eberhard Busch [“Das trinitarische Bekenntnis
im Genfer Gottesdienst,” pp. 195-209], and Anni Maria
Laato [“Die Trinitätslehre in Dogmatik-Vorlesungen
in Schweden-Finnland während der 1770er Jahre,” pp.
211-221]), and the History of the Protestant Reformation (Inge
Mager [“Bemühungen um die Reform der Klosterkonvente
im fünfzehnten Jahrhundert. Grundzüge der
Windesheimer und Bursfelder Reform,” pp. 223-243] and
Jouko Heikkinen [“Die Einheit Gottes und der Anfang der
Katechismustradition,” pp. 245-252]).