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See also: Antioch, was See also: born at Antioch about the See also: middle of the 4th century and was a friend of See also: John
See also: Chrysostom; in rhetoric the celebrated See also: Libanius was his teacher
.
Soon, however, he attached himself to the school of the See also: great exegete and ascetic, Diodorus, a presbyter in Antioch, and with only a transitory See also: period of vacillation, from which he was won back by Chrysostom, he remained faithful to the See also: theology and ascetic discipline of this master
.
Under Diodorus he became a skilful exegete, and ultimately outstripped his master in biblical learning
.
About 383 See also: Theodore became a presbyter in Antioch, and began to write against See also: Eunomius the Arian and against the christology of See also: Apollinaris
.
Soon after 392 he became See also: bishop of Mopsuestia in See also: Cilicia (the See also: modern Missis near See also: Adana)
.
As such he was held in great respect, and took See also: part in several synods, with a reputation for orthodoxy that was never questioned
.
It was greatly to his See also: advantage that in the Eastern See also: Church the period between the years 390 and 428 was one of
See also: comparative repose
.
He was on friendly terms even with Cyril of Alexandria
.
He died in 428 or 429, just at the beginning of the Nestorian controversy
.
Theodore was a very prolific writer, but, before all, an exegete
.
He wrote commentaries on almost every See also: book of the Old and New Testaments, of which, however, only a small proportion is now extant, as at a later period he lost See also: credit in the church
.
We still possess in See also: Greek his commentary on the Minor Prophets, in a See also: Syriac version his commentary on St John,' and, in Latin See also: translations, commentaries on the shorter Pa See also: ine epistles, besides very many fragments, especially on the epi tle to the See also: Romans
.
Theodore's importance as an exegete lies in two characteristics: (r) in opposition to the allegorical method he insists on getting at the literal meaning, and adheres to it when found; (2) in his interpretation of the Scriptures he takes into account theSee also: historical circumstances in which they were produced, and substitutes the historical-typological for the pneumatico-christological interpretation of prophecy; in other words, he interprets all Old Testament passages historically in the first instance, and See also: sees the fulfilment of Old Testament prophecy in the See also: history of Christ and His church only in so far as the entire Old Testament is a " See also: shadow of things to come." Following his master Diodorus, who had already written a See also: treatise Tls Sca¢opr
.
Oswp!as Kai &XAoyoptas, Theodore also was the author of a See also: special dissertation against the allegorists, i.e. against See also: Origen and his followers, which, however, has unfortunately perished
.
The comparative freedom of Theodore's view of inspiration is also note-worthy
.
He discriminates between historical, prophetical and didactic writings, and in accordance with this distinction assumes varying degrees of inspiration
.
Finally, he entertained very bok opinions about the See also: canon and several of the books included in it
1 Ed
.
P
.
B
.
See also: Chabot (See also: Paris, 1897)
.
He esteemed very lightly the Solomonic writings and the book of See also: Job; See also: Canticles he explained as a nuptial poem of See also: Solomon's; the book of Job appeared to him in many places hardly worthy of its subject, and he censures the writer sharply; See also: Chronicles, See also: Ezra and Nehemiah he entirely rejected; he denied the accuracy of the titles of the Psalms, anticipated the hypothesis that many of them belong to the Maccabean age, and referred the so-cal!ed Messianic See also: element almost invariably to the See also: kings of Israel; he even criticized the Catholic epistles and rejected the See also: epistle of See also: James
.
Characteristics such as these bring Theodore, of all patristic writers, nearest to the modern spirit
.
His commentaries contain a great
See also: deal of learned See also: matter, and his grammatico-historical observations are still to some extent useful
.
But, on the other See also: hand, his learning must not be overestimated
.
It falls behind that of Origen, See also: Eusebius and See also: Jerome, notwithstanding the superiority of his method It is specially noticeable that Theodore troubled himself little about textual See also: criticism
.
He simply accepts the text of the LXX as that or See also: revelation, and never manifests the slightest effort to control it by the See also: original or even by the Syriac
.
He is a prosaic and often monotonous writer, and has other faults, e.g a lack of insight into the deeper movements of scriptural thought, and a want of spiritual and devotional fervour
.
In addition to his commentaries Theodore also wrote extensive dogmatico-polemical See also: works, which were destined to operate long after his See also: death disastrously for his fame
.
As a See also: disciple of Diodorus, Theodore accepted the Nicene teaching on the See also: doctrine of the Trinity, but at the same See also: time in christology took up a position very closely approaching that of See also: Paul of Samosata
.
The violence of his opposition to his See also: fellow-countryman, Apollinaris of See also: Laodicea, perhaps the most acute and far-seeing theologian of the century, made it necessary for Theodore to formulate his christology with precision (in fifteen books on the Incarnation—all lost except a few fragments—and in special See also: treatises against Apollinaris)
.
He starts with a theory of See also: man's relation to the See also: world
.
11Ian is the vinculum of the cosmos, uniting in his See also: person the material and .the spiritual
.
This bond, broken by sin, was restored by Christ
.
According to Theodore the See also: Logos assumed a See also: complete manhood, which had to pass through the stages of ethical development just as in the See also: case of any other human being
.
In this the Logos only supported the man Christ Jesus, but was not essentially connected with him; the Loos dwelt in him (ivotssiv), but any such thing as g'wacs 43vaiKi did not and could not exist, because the finite is not ' capax infiniti," and because any See also: glass's would have destroyed the reality of the human nature
.
The same sober and thoughtful way of looking at things, and the same tendency to give prominence to the moral element, which characterize the commentaries of Theodore, appear also in his dogmatic
.
When, accordingly, the Nestorian controversy broke out, his works also were dragged into the discussion . AtSee also: Ephesus, indeed, the memory of Theodore does not appear to have been attacked,' but soon afterwards the assault began
.
See also: Marius Mercator, See also: Rabbula of See also: Edessa, Cyril, and other See also: monophysites brought the See also: charge of See also: heresy against his writings, and sought to counteract their influence
.
But it was not until more than a century afterwards that his fanatical adversaries succeeded—in spite of the stron opposition of the best theologians of the West—in obtaining from Justinian the condemnation of his works in the controversy of the Three Chapters; this See also: act of the emperor was confirmed by the fifth oecumenical council, and Theodore's name was accordingly deleted from the See also: list of orthodox writers
.
From that See also: day Theodore's works ceased to be read within the See also: Byzantine Church, and hence have been lost
.
The Syrians, on the other hand, have always held in high esteem the memory of the great teacher, and have even carried back their See also: liturgy to his name
.
The See also: Nestorians, who called him " the Interpreter," possess, or possessed, a very large number of writings by him in Syriac translations
?
Theodore took part also in the Pelagian controversy at the time when it raged in See also: Palestine
.
In the treatise, only partially pre-
served,' Hgls roils M yovras ddoa sal oh 1'v .ij irrahhis roVS &sOpWirovs,
he sharply controverts the doctrine of original sin and Jerome its advocate
.
In his view the theory of Augustine is " a new heresy," a " malady "; he regarded it as a doctrine which necessarily led to dualism and See also: Manichaeism
.
The attitude thus taken by Theodore is not surprising; he more nearly takes up the ground of the old church doctrine as set forth in the apologists and in the great Greek fathers of the 3rd and 4th centuries
.
The Pelagians driven from the See also: East were received by him in Cilicia
.
A See also: brother of Theodore, Polychronius by name, bishop of See also: Apamea in See also: Syria (d
.
430) also achieved high fame as an exegete, and expounded the theology of the school of Antioch.'
' A confession, however, See also: drawn up by him was spoken of; see iahn, Biblioth. der Symbole, 2nd ed., p
.
229 seq
.
' See the See also: catalogue in See also: Assemani, Bibl
.
Or., iii
.
1, p
.
3 seq., based on Ebedjesu, the Nestorian metropolitan (d
.
1318)
.
3 See See also: Photius, Biblioth., c
.
177; Mercator, p
.
339 seq., ed
.
Baluz
.
See O . Bardenhewer, Polychronius ( See also: Freiburg, 1879)
.
collected by O
.
Fr Fritzsche (Theod
.
Mops. in N.T
.
See also: Comm., See also: Turin, 1847)
.
The commentaries on the Pauline epistles (Pitra, Spicilegium Soiesmense, Paris, 1852, i
.
49 seq.) have been edited by H
.
B
.
Swete (Theod
.
Mops. in Epp
.
B
.
See also: Pauli Comm., i., ii., Cambridge, 188o-82), along with the Greek fragments and the fragments of the dogmatical writings; on this edition, see E
.
Scharer, Theol
.
Lit
.
Ztg., 1880-82
.
The commentary on the Minor Prophets will be found in See also: Mai's Nov
.
Pair
.
Biblioth., vii
.
1854 (Berlin, 1834; Mai, Script
.
See also: Vet
.
Nov
.
See also: Coll., vi., 1832)
.
See also E
.
Sachau, Theod . Mops . Fragm . Syriaca ( See also: Leipzig, 1869) ; Fr- Bathgen, " Der Psalmencommentar See also: des Theod, v
.
Mops. in Syr
.
Bearbeitung," in Ztschr. f
.
Alt-Test
.
Wissensch., v
.
53 seq., vi
.
261–288, vii
.
1–6o; and H Lietzmann in Sitzungsberichte der Kgl. preuss
.
Akad. der Wissensch. zu Berlin, 1902, pp
.
334 seq . Extracts from the writings of Theodore occur in the Catenae of Marius Mercator, in the See also: Asia of the third and fifth oecumenical See also: councils in Facundus, Liberatus, and Theodore's chief adversary See also: Leontius Byzantinus
.
E. von Dobschiitz, in Amer
.
Journ. of Theol., ii
.
353–387, published the Greek prologue of a commentary on Acts that is probably the See also: work of Theodore
.
The princ'See also: pal monograph on Theodore, apart from the prolegomena of Swete, and the same writer's article in Dist
.
Christian Biog., iv
.
(1887), is that of H
.
Kihn (Th. v
.
Mops. u
.
Junilius Afric. als Exegeten, Freiburg, 188o)
.
On his importance for the history of dogma see the works of Baur, See also: Dorner, See also: Harnack, Loofs and Seeberg
.
See also: Literary and See also: biographical details will be found in O
.
Fr
.
Fritzsche, De Theod
.
Mops
.
Vita et Scriptis (See also: Halle, 1836); Fr
.
A
.
Specht, Theod. v
.
Mops. u
.
See also: Theodoret (See also: Munich, 1871); H
.
Kihn in the Tub
.
Quartalschr., 1879: E
.
Nestle in Theol
.
See also: Stud. aus Wurtemb., ii
.
210 seq.; P
.
Batiffol, " Sur une Traduction Latine de Th. de Mops.," in See also: Ann. de Philos
.
Chret., 1885; Th
.
Zahn, " Das N
.
T
.
Theodors von See also: Mop.," in Neue Kirchl
.
Zeitschr., xi
.
788–806; W
.
See also: Wright, Syriac Literature (See also: London, 1894) ; R
.
Duval, La litteralure syriaque (Paris, 1899)
.
(A
.
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