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Автор Clark, Elizabeth
Дата выпуска 2002
dc.description The subtitle of Drakeʼs book, ‘The Politics of Intolerance’, provides an apt starting place. First, ‘Politics’: it is Drakeʼs contention that many earlier scholars’ investigations of Constantine have run amok by adopting largely theological perspectives, by worrying whether Constantine was ‘sincere’ in his Christian profession. Indeed, much in Constantineʼs practices and discourse (such as we can recover them) suggested to previous commentators that he had little understanding of theological niceties, and that his Christian commitment was to some degree feigned. Drake argues that we should rather look to the political problems that Constantine faced and the policy options available to him. (For one, Diocletianʼs persecution had proved a massive and costly failure: where to go from there?) If ‘politics’ is the arena in which we assess Constantine, scholars should investigate social processes, not theological puzzles. We have been using the wrong map: ‘political symptoms’ should not be treated with ‘theological remedies’ (465). Public policy studies, in particular, is the field to which we should turn.
Издатель Cambridge University Press
Название Hal Drakeʼs Constantine and the Bishops
DOI 10.1017/S0036930602000364
Electronic ISSN 1475-3065
Print ISSN 0036-9306
Журнал Scottish Journal of Theology
Том 55
Первая страница 356
Последняя страница 362
Аффилиация Clark Elizabeth; Duke University Department of Religion
Выпуск 3

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