Description

Book Synopsis

The ancient cento-genre was prone to be used on all kinds of subjects. New texts were created out of the classical epics. Empress Eudocia followed this practice and composed the story of Jesus in lines lifted almost verbatim from Homer’s epics. Jesus and his relevance to her audience is thus presented within the confines of style and vocabulary offered by the Iliad and Odyssey. The lines picked to convey her theology are often clustered around key Homeric motifs or type scenes, such as warfare, homecoming, feast, reconciliation, hospitality. Jesus waging war against all evil and Hades in particular runs throughout this Homeric and simultaneously biblical epic. The story starts in the Old Testament which is conceived as a divine counsel on Mt. Olympus where a plan to save sinful humanity is presented. The narrative then follows the biographic lines of the canonical gospels, with John’s Gospel holding pride of place in the way she renders and interprets the Jesus-story. The story told suspends both the geography and time of Jesus. Eudocia preaches the story she tells. She emerges in this poem as one of the most, if not the most prolific female theologian and preacher in the first Christian centuries.



Trade Review

Over 1,000 years before Milton put classical epic to work to ‘assert eternal Providence and justify the ways of God to Man’ in Paradise Lost, there was Eudocia, who in retelling the Christian story of salvation with lines from Homer’s Iliad and Odyssey composed a theological poem of unusual communicative power. This is a woman—an empress, no less—who, as Karl Olav Sandnes puts it, insists on being heard, at a time of charged theological debate dominated by men. Sandnes presents Eudocia’s poem as an original, even idiosyncratic, interpretation of the Gospels that weaves together Christian and pre-Christian strands of tradition into one rich tapestry.

-- M. D. Usher, The University of Vermont

This is a careful study of Eudocia’s representation of Jesus as a Homeric hero in her Homerocentones—a very fine investigation into the work of an ancient, refined female author against the backdrop of Biblical passages silencing women, which Eudocia turns upside down. This intriguing research delves into one of the many ways in which classical culture and Christianity intersected in late antiquity in amazingly productive ways.

-- Ilaria L.E. Ramelli, Durham University and University of Cambridge

Table of Contents

Preface

Abbreviations

Introduction

Chapter 1: A Homeric Gospel

Chapter 2: A Divine Plan is Conceived

Chapter 3: A Readers Guide: Chaps. 19–22

Chapter 4: A Ministry that Is a Sign: Introducing the Sign-Miracle Cycle

Chapter 5: Homeric Banquets and Feasting in the Sign-Miracle Cycle

Chapter 6: Homeward Bound in the Sign-Miracle Cycle

Chapter 7: Recognizing the Divine and Finding a Groom in the Sign-Miracle Cycle

Chapter 8: Taking on Death/Hades in the Sign-Miracle Cycle

Chapter 9: Feast and Eucharist in the Passion Story

Chapter 10: The Battle: Overthrowing Hades in the Passion Story

Chapter 11: “The Man Who Wrought Much Evil, Beyond the Others Together”: Judas

Conclusion

Bibliography

Index

About the Author

Jesus the Epic Hero: The Theology of Empress

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    A Hardback by Karl Olav Sandnes

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      View other formats and editions of Jesus the Epic Hero: The Theology of Empress by Karl Olav Sandnes

      Publisher: Lexington Books
      Publication Date: 29/08/2022
      ISBN13: 9781666908626, 978-1666908626
      ISBN10: 1666908622

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      The ancient cento-genre was prone to be used on all kinds of subjects. New texts were created out of the classical epics. Empress Eudocia followed this practice and composed the story of Jesus in lines lifted almost verbatim from Homer’s epics. Jesus and his relevance to her audience is thus presented within the confines of style and vocabulary offered by the Iliad and Odyssey. The lines picked to convey her theology are often clustered around key Homeric motifs or type scenes, such as warfare, homecoming, feast, reconciliation, hospitality. Jesus waging war against all evil and Hades in particular runs throughout this Homeric and simultaneously biblical epic. The story starts in the Old Testament which is conceived as a divine counsel on Mt. Olympus where a plan to save sinful humanity is presented. The narrative then follows the biographic lines of the canonical gospels, with John’s Gospel holding pride of place in the way she renders and interprets the Jesus-story. The story told suspends both the geography and time of Jesus. Eudocia preaches the story she tells. She emerges in this poem as one of the most, if not the most prolific female theologian and preacher in the first Christian centuries.



      Trade Review

      Over 1,000 years before Milton put classical epic to work to ‘assert eternal Providence and justify the ways of God to Man’ in Paradise Lost, there was Eudocia, who in retelling the Christian story of salvation with lines from Homer’s Iliad and Odyssey composed a theological poem of unusual communicative power. This is a woman—an empress, no less—who, as Karl Olav Sandnes puts it, insists on being heard, at a time of charged theological debate dominated by men. Sandnes presents Eudocia’s poem as an original, even idiosyncratic, interpretation of the Gospels that weaves together Christian and pre-Christian strands of tradition into one rich tapestry.

      -- M. D. Usher, The University of Vermont

      This is a careful study of Eudocia’s representation of Jesus as a Homeric hero in her Homerocentones—a very fine investigation into the work of an ancient, refined female author against the backdrop of Biblical passages silencing women, which Eudocia turns upside down. This intriguing research delves into one of the many ways in which classical culture and Christianity intersected in late antiquity in amazingly productive ways.

      -- Ilaria L.E. Ramelli, Durham University and University of Cambridge

      Table of Contents

      Preface

      Abbreviations

      Introduction

      Chapter 1: A Homeric Gospel

      Chapter 2: A Divine Plan is Conceived

      Chapter 3: A Readers Guide: Chaps. 19–22

      Chapter 4: A Ministry that Is a Sign: Introducing the Sign-Miracle Cycle

      Chapter 5: Homeric Banquets and Feasting in the Sign-Miracle Cycle

      Chapter 6: Homeward Bound in the Sign-Miracle Cycle

      Chapter 7: Recognizing the Divine and Finding a Groom in the Sign-Miracle Cycle

      Chapter 8: Taking on Death/Hades in the Sign-Miracle Cycle

      Chapter 9: Feast and Eucharist in the Passion Story

      Chapter 10: The Battle: Overthrowing Hades in the Passion Story

      Chapter 11: “The Man Who Wrought Much Evil, Beyond the Others Together”: Judas

      Conclusion

      Bibliography

      Index

      About the Author

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