Abstract

This collection of eleven essays honors the work of Rowan A. Greer, Walter H. Gray Professor Emeritus of Anglican Studies at Yale University Divinity School, who throughout his forty-year career advanced scholarship on Theodore of Mopsuestia, Antiochene Christology, patristic biblical interpretation, and common life in the early church. The book explores the connections between interpretation [End Page 437] of texts and the formation and maintenance of religious identity. It also analyzes how the locations from which texts are received relate to the meanings given them. The contributors are a diverse group of biblical scholars, theologians, and church historians—all friends, colleagues, and students of Greer.

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