Tuesday, July 7, 2026

Update on Health//Gofundme to Support Expenses for Next 3-6 Months

Crossposting from youtube:


Just a final reminder before I head off for today's treatment and final reminder for a while (at least for a few months anyway; hope to have good news by end of September or end of December):


My treatment for my health issues (those who know me personally know what it is, it is liver-related) started this week, and will be every Tuesday and Thursday for 3 or 6 months.

As a result, I will be more or less out of work (bookkeeping/accountancy/translation) for 3-6 months (plus recovery time), so if you can share the gofundme and paypal links in the announcement on discord, twitter/x, youtube, blogs, etc., please do so (and if you have an "in" with a large YT channel like  ⁨@WARDRADIO⁩   ⁨@ChristianHomesteader⁩  or  ⁨@thestickofjoseph⁩  such as Luke at  ⁨@DoctrineAndGovernance⁩  and  ⁨@yeahkwaku⁩  and also  ⁨@thoughtfulfaith2020⁩   ⁨@CwicShow⁩   ⁨@LetsTalk-HaydenCarroll⁩   ⁨@Mormonismexplained⁩   ⁨@TheInterpreterFoundation⁩  please do so and maybe they will "plug" it somehow, too, via their YT posts, tiktok, or whatnot). And if my IRL/online friends such as



Thanks!

Monday, July 6, 2026

Nissim Amzallag on the Consistency of the Old Testament in its theology and not being strictly monotheistic During the Persian and Hellenistic Periods

Against the thesis that there is a radical shift from a form of monolatry to strict monotheism in the Persian and Hellenistic periods:

 

If the development of monotheism is the axis of such an evolutionary process, we may expect the last biblical writings to express a “mature” form of this theology, in which the divine beings other than YHWH are entirely excluded. This premise is unverified, however. In the Book of Zechariah, the prophet explicitly refers not to YHWH, but to a divine emissary speaking through him (hamalak̄ hadob̄ er̄ ). (Zech 1:9, 1:14, 1:19, 2:3, 4:1, 4:4–5, 5:5, 5:10, 6:4–5.) This involvement is accompanied in Zechariah by details about the divine council surrounding YHWH. (Zech 1:11–13, 3:1.) Such a feature present in the earliest evolutionary stages (in which monotheism was supposedly still not differentiated from polytheism) is unexpected in a postexilic opus such as the Book of Zechariah. And this book is not the only late composition displaying this anomaly. The divine council is mentioned in the Book of Job (Job 1:6–12). Proverbs, another late opus, includes explicit references to a female divine being, an Asherah-like goddess personifying Wisdom and present beside YHWH at the early time of creation (Prov 8:22–31). Malachi, the last prophetic book, includes an oracle far from any “mature” form of monotheism: “Behold, I send my messenger, and he will prepare the way before me. And the lord (haʾ̄ ad̄ on̑ ) whom you seek will suddenly come to his temple; And the messenger of the covenant (ûmal ʾak̄ habe˘rît) in whom you delight, behold, he is coming, says YHWH Sebaoth” (Mal 3:1). (The English Standard Version of Bible translation is used in this study, with minor modifications.) This verse does not only introduce the figure of the divine emissary of YHWH, it even claims that this secondary divine being is worshipped by the Israelites, and it even considers the Jerusalem temple as his dominion. Finally, Daniel, one of the latest books, is also the source where divine beings others than YHWH have the highest importance in the Bible.

 

The multiplicity of divine beings, a so-called primitive character, extends to postbiblical compositions. An examination of literary sources from the beginning of the first millennium AD reveals a plethora of divine beings, most of them identified by a name (a condition for their worship), in the Hekhalot literature, the Book of Enoch, and other apocalyptic writings. Peter Hayman concludes that “monotheism” is a “misused word” in Jewish studies. (Hayman 1991: 15.) Nevertheless, this Jewish literature should not be interpreted as a “regression” to a polytheistic faith. Rather, Larry Hurtado notices, in the early Jewish literature, “a remarkable ability to combine a genuine concern for God’s uniqueness together with an interest in other figures or transcendent attributes described in the most exalted terms, ‘principal agent’ figures likened to God in some cases.” (Hurtado 1998: 3) Consequently, no evolutionary trend toward monotheism may be traced throughout a millennium of worship of YHWH by the Israelites. (Nissim Amzallag, Yahweh and the Origins of Ancient Israel: Insights from the Archaeological Record [Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2023], 8-9, italics in original)

 

 

Peter Lombard on Immolation in Book 4 of the Sentences

In his popular book against Roman Catholicism, The Church of Rome at the Bar of History (1995), William Webster wrote the following concerning Peter Lombard’s (d. 1160) theology of the Mass:

 

Historically, the word immolate had been used by Fathers and theologians of the Church to refer to the eucharist as a commemoration of the once-for-all sacrifice of Christ. Augustine used the word in this way and his definition became normative for centuries afterwards. For example, Peter Lombard in the twelfth century in his Sentences expressed the Augustinian view in this way:

 

We may briefly reply that what is offered and consecrated by the priest is called a sacrifice and an immolation because it is a memorial and a representation of the true sacrifice and holy immolation made upon the altar of the cross. Christ died once, upon the cross, and there he was immolated in his own person; and yet every day he is immolated sacramentally, because in the sacrament there is a recalling of what was done once.

 

The meaning of the term as it is expressed here is strictly that of a sacramental commemoration, it was not literal. However, Trent’s use of the term added a new dimension of meaning to the word which differs from that of Augustine for he did not view Christ as being physically present in the sacrament, nor the eucharist as a propitiatory sacrifice for sin. Augustine certainly did not teach that the sacrifice of the eucharist was the same as the sacrifice of Calvary. (William Webster, The Church of Rome at the Bar of History [Edinburgh: The Banner of Truth Trust, 1995], 123)

 

Webster gives the following reference (ibid., 227 n. 21):

 

Sentences, book IV, dist. 12, cap. 5. Taken from Francis Clark, Eucharistic Sacrifice and the Reformation (Oxford: Basil Blackwell, 1967), 407.

 

However, this appears to be a quote-mine from Webster. Before I address Clark’s book, the following is a modern translation of Book IV, Distinction 12, Chapter 5:

 

1. WHETHER IT IS A SACRIFICE, AND IS CHRIST IMMOLATED MORE THAN ONCE. After these matters, it is asked whether what the priest does is properly called a sacrifice or immolation, and whether Christ is immolated every day, or if he was immolated only once.—To this, it may briefly be said that what is offered and consecrated by the priest is called sacrifice and oblation, because it is a remembrance and representation of the true sacrifice and the holy immolation made on the altar of the cross. And indeed Christ died only once, namely on the cross, and there he was immolated in himself; but he is daily immolated in the sacrament, because in the sacrament is made a remembrance of what was done once.

 

2. AUGUSTINE, ON PSALM 20. Hence Augustine: “We have it for certain that Christ, risen from the dead, shall not die again, etc. And yet, lest we forget what was once done, it happens again in our memory every year, namely as often as Easter is celebrated. Is Christ killed so often? And yet the yearly remembrance represents what was once done; and so it causes us to be moved, as if we were seeing the Lord on the cross.” [Augustine, Enarrationes in Psalms, 2, on Ps. 21, n1] —AUGUSTINE, IN THE SENTENCES OF PROSPER. Also: “Christ was immolated once in himself, and yet he is immolated every day in the sacrament. This is to be understood as follows: that in the manifestation of his body and the distinction of his members he hung on the cross only once, offering himself to the Father as an efficacious victim for the redemption of those whom he had predestined.” [Lanfranc, De corpore et sanguine Domini, c15; cf. Augustine, Epistola 98 (ad Bonifacium episcopum), n9]

 

3. AMBROSE, ON THE LETTER TO THE HEBREWS. Also Ambrose: “In Christ was offered once the sacrificial victim which is powerful for salvation. What about us? Do we not offer each day? Although we do offer every day, this is done in remembrance of his death; and there is one victim, not many. How is it one, and not many? Because Christ was offered once. This sacrifice is the precedent of the other; the same, always the same is offered: so this is the sacrifice. But, since the offering is made in many places, are there many Christs? No, but there is one Christ everywhere, being here in his fullness, and there also. Just as what is offered everywhere is one body, so also it is one sacrifice. Christ offered the victim; we offer the same one even now.”—“But that which we do is a remembrance of the sacrifice. Nor is it repeated because of its own deficiency, since it perfects man; no, it is because of ours, since we sin daily.” [Rather, John Chrysostom, Homiliae in epistolam ad Hebraeos, hom. 17, n3, on Heb. 10, 1.]

 

4. ON THE POWER OF THE SACRAMENT. From these statements, it is gathered that what is done at the altar is and is called a sacrifice; and that Christ was offered once, and is offered every day; but in one way then, in another now. And it is also shown what the power of this sacrament is, namely the remission of venial sins and the perfecting of virtue. (Peter Lombard, The Sentences, 4 vols. [trans. Giulio Silano; Mediaeval Sources in Translation 48; Toronto: Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, 2010], 4:64-65)

 

In Clark’s book, which Webster referenced, comments thusly on the third paragraph:

 

This passage is of great interest, for no text was more constantly quoted by the Catholic theologians, both before and during the Reformation, to explain the doctrine of the Mass. . . . The Master of the Sentences comments: ‘From these passages we gather that what is done at the altar both is called and is a sacrifice, and that Christ was offered once and is offered daily, but in different manner then and now’. Another reason why the passage from ‘Ambrose’ became the most celebrated of all the texts relating to the Mass was its inclusion, as well as in the Sentences of Lombard, in the collections of the decretalists, notably in those of Ivo of Chartres († 1116) and of Gratian († c. 1158). Their works were, with the Sentences, the commonplace- books of the mediaeval scholastics, most of whom took their citations from the Fathers not from the original sources but from these convenient stores. (Francis Clark, Eucharistic Sacrifice and the Reformation [London: Darton, Longman & Todd, 1960], 75, 76)

 

It appears that Webster (and those who follow him and/or similar quotes from Lombard, without reading Lombard’s Sentences) is engaging in a quote-mine. While I am very critical of Roman Catholic theology, I have never been much of a fan of Webster. His works are good for bibliography (he often quotes directly from good secondary sources, such as the works of Eno), but Webster himself is a lousy critic of Catholicism.

Sunday, July 5, 2026

Severus of Antioch (d. 538) on Pre- and Post-Baptismal Works and James and Paul on "Faith"

Severus, patriarch of Antioch, in a letter to Julian, bishop of Halicarnassus:

 

For you said excellently and rightly that these teachers are not opposed to each other, just as Paul and James are not, with the one saying that a human being is justified by faith without works [Gal 2:16, Eph 2:8–9], while the other writes that faith without works is dead [Jas 2:26]. For Paul spoke of the faith that precedes baptism, which requires only the consent of the whole heart to the confession, without its being preceded by a life of good works, a faith that justifies all that partakes in some way of evil, when in the divine laver of regeneration he confesses his faith that comes from instruction. James, on the other hand, speaks of the faith that follows baptism, that it is dead if one possesses it without works, that is, if one does not confirm it by deeds of justice. For baptism is the pledge of a life ordered to the good. Thus even our Lord was the type for us, who, after he had been baptized by John and had sanctified the waters and inaugurated our baptism, went up into the mountain and entered into contest with the Slanderer and undid all his power in advance, so giving us through the type a sign and an image by which we understand that after the divine ablution, works are required and that these are the contests we are to expect and that we must contend in them lawfully [2 Tm 2:5] against the enemy through the proof of virtues.

 

But perhaps someone will retort and say: “Look, Paul also took Abraham as a type of the human being who is justified by faith without works when he says: ‘Well then, they who are of faith are blessed with Abraham the believer’ [Gal 3:9] and: ‘For the one who does not work, but trusts in him who justifies sinners, his faith is reckoned to him as righteousness’ [Rom 4:5]. On the other hand, the apostle James takes the same Abraham as a type of the human being who is not justified by faith alone, but also by the works which confirm faith. How, therefore, do they not contradict each other, and how is the same Abraham the image of faith without works and of that which is with works?”

 

But we can easily draw a solution from the divine Scriptures. For it is the one Abraham who at distinct times is the image, now of one faith, now of the other, of that which precedes baptism and does not require works but only confession and the saving word by which we are justified when we have faith in Christ, and of that which follows baptism and is linked to works. For we know that the circumcision in the flesh of old was practiced as a type, an image that was fulfilled in saving baptism. By the removal of the foreskin it teaches renunciation and rebirth according to the flesh and makes those who are circumcised into sons of God. It was for this reason that the Lord commanded Moses that he was to speak thus to Pharaoh: “You shall say to Pharaoh: Thus says the Lord: Israel is my first-born son” [Ex 4:22]. It was of this that Paul, too, writing to the Colossians, said: “You have been circumcised with a circumcision not wrought by hands, but through the stilling of the body of flesh in the circumcision that is from Christ, when you were buried with him in baptism” [Col 2:11–12]. It was for this reason indeed that he said that Abraham was justified without works by faith, when before circumcision he was with foreskin and presenting the image of the faith that precedes baptism, being given life through confession alone, and not through works. For he said, when he wrote to the Romans: “His faith was reckoned to Abraham as righteousness. How then was this reckoned to him, when he was in circumcision, or when he was with foreskin? It was not with circumcision but with foreskin” [Rom 4:9–10]. And he did not lie. For he bore witness to the expression of Moses who said that God spoke to Abraham when he had not yet been circumcised: “Lift up your eyes to the heavens and count the stars, if you are able to count them,” and he said: “Such will be your seed. And Abraham put his faith in God and it was reckoned to him as righteousness” (Gn 15:5–6).

 

Conversely, in order to demonstrate the faith which follows baptism, and gives life through good works, the godly James chooses the same Abraham, but him as circumcised and without foreskin. One can learn from the texts whose words were spoken in the Spirit. For it is written: “Do you wish to be shown, O vain man, how faith without works is dead? Was our Father Abraham not justified by works when he offered up his son Isaac as a sacrifice? You see that faith was active in his works, and faith was completed by works, and the Scripture was fulfilled which says: ‘Abraham believed in God, and it was reckoned to him as righteousness,’ and he was called ‘the friend of God’ ” [Jas 2:20–23, citing Gn 15:6]. It is easy for one who reads the writings of Moses to learn clearly from the Book of Genesis that it was after Abraham was circumcised that he was commanded to offer up Isaac on the high place, that he fulfilled the commandment, and that he was justified by works, again prefiguring in his own person the faith that follows baptism—which is the figurative circumcision—and that justifies a human being through works. For it is written that Abraham and his son Ishmael were first circumcised, and those born in his house, and those he purchased for money from foreign peoples, and that it was afterwards that God tested Abraham and said: “Take your son, your only one, Isaac whom you love, and go to a high country and offer him up there as a sacrifice” [Gn 17:26–27]. Thus, manifestly the same Spirit does not contradict himself now here, now there, who by the apostles and by the ancient writings of the Law spoke concerning faith, of that which precedes baptism and that which follows baptism. The one justifies by simple confession alone without works him who approaches the divine ablution as a viaticum that suffices him for salvation, should he suddenly depart this world. The other requires of one who has been baptized the testimony of good deeds, and it raises him to a perfect state and a lofty dignity. It is therefore most fitting that James says concerning this: “Faith is completed through works” [Jas 2:22].

 

For Paul, wise in all things, also spoke in a way that accords with these passages. He teaches in another place that faith following baptism has need of being completed by works. For the Galatians, having been baptized and reckoned among the sons of God through the adoption as sons that comes from the Spirit, were turning again to Judaism, having themselves circumcised in the flesh, and thinking in their senselessness that those circumcised in the flesh had some advantage in Christ over those with foreskin. He wrote to rebuke their folly: For in Christ Jesus neither circumcision nor uncircumcision is of any avail, but faith that is completed in love [Gal 5:6]. Therefore, it is demonstrated clearly from this passage that faith following baptism avails and gives life when it is active through the love that is joined to it. And what is the activity of love? Again it is Paul who proclaims and says: “Love is patient and mild; love is not envious or unquiet; it does not vaunt itself; it does nothing impudent. Love does not seek its own interest; it is not irascible or devise wickedness; it takes no delight in iniquity but delights in righteousness. Love bears all things, believes all things, hopes all things, endures all things. Love never falls away” [1 Cor 13:4–8]. But in order that these things be rightly guided, they need much sweat and toil; if they are to be life-giving and helpful in accord with our rule of faith, who would dare to dispute? It was for this reason that our Lord himself said: “If you love me, keep my commandments” [Jn 14:15].

 

Therefore, the divine Scriptures and the Fathers concur in the way they instruct us in the meaning of these passages. This they have already done in writing, in which they teach those who do not read their works carelessly. For as it is written: “All is before the face of those who understand, and straightforward to those who find knowledge” [Prv 8:9]. (“Second Letter of Severus to Julian,” in Conflict and Negotiation in the Early Church: Letters from Late Antiquity, Translated from the Greek, Latin, and Syriac [trans. Bronwen Neil and Pauline Allen; Washington, D. C.: The Catholic University of America Press, 2020], 106-10, italics in original)

 

 

Saturday, July 4, 2026

Bronwen Neil and Pauline Allen on Pope John IV's Attempt to Defend Honorius from Charges of Teaching Monothelitism

  

John IV of Rome (640–642) Born in Dalmatia, John IV was a convinced dyothelite who “gave money for ransoming captives in Dalmatia through the very holy and most faithful abbot Martin,” most likely the later pope Martin I. John IV wrote one surviving letter to Pyrrhus, the then-monothelite patriarch of Constantinople, and an apologia for Pope Honorius in spring 641. In his apologia to Emperor Constantine III, he attempted to play down Honorius’s originality, saying: “[Sergius wrote to Honorius] that certain men were speaking of two opposing wills in our redeemer and Lord Jesus Christ. When the aforementioned pope found that out, he wrote back to him that, just as our Savior was one monad, in such a way also he was conceived and born miraculously above the whole human race.” The addition of the critical word “opposing” justifies Honorius’s objection, but unfortunately was not part of Sergius’s account of the objection of Sophronius.

 

John IV was the recipient of a letter from Heraclius, informing him that he had written an inscription for an icon of the crucifixion in the patriarchate of Constantinople. The inscription contained a formulation of two natures and “one independent will” of Jesus Christ. (Bronwen Neil and Pauline Allen, Conflict and Negotiation in the Early Church: Letters from Late Antiquity, Translated from the Greek, Latin, and Syriac [Washington, D. C.: The Catholic University of America Press, 2020], 172)

 

Friday, July 3, 2026

John M. Rist on Augustine's Theology of Original Sin and the Text of Romans 5:12

  

As a result of Adam’s sin comes sin, death, and a general desertion of the good by mankind. All the descendants of Adam are scarred by ‘concupiscence’, and by what Augustine calls ‘ignorance’ and ‘difficulty’, the sheer inability to carry out what we known to be right. The human race has been corrupted by Adam, because all men are in some sense ‘in Adam’. Augustine repeatedly misquotes St. Paul to the effect that we all sinned in Adam (in quo omnes peccaverunt), where the Greek text reads εφ ω (Rom. 5:12), but although this text supports Augustine’s position it does not dictate it.

 

All men, Augustine argues, are identical with Adam. All men sinned in Adam on that occasion, he writes, since all were already identical with him in that nature of his which was endowed with the capacity to generate them. (John M. Rist, “Augustine on Free Will and Predestination,” in Augustine: A Collection of Critical Essays, ed. R. A. Markus [Modern Studies in Philosophy; New York: Anchor Books, 1972], 230)

 

Thursday, July 2, 2026

John M. Rist on Augustine and the Question of Mary's Sinlessness

  

. . . for Augustine no one can know that he is saved and even those who are saved do not lead perfect lives. Not only do they need continual help, they would be utterly unable to act for good, but even when in receipt of help their evil and corrupted natures are continually struggling to reassert themselves. Augustine seems to have been worried that if he allowed anyone, even with God’s help, to reach a state of achieved perfection in this life, the help would become unnecessary. And he is convinced by the Bible that its consistent message is that God’s help is always necessary. So insistent is Augustine on this point that even in the case of Mary he is very careful in his remarks about her being without sin. The Pelagians had claimed that various Old Testament worthies had lived sinless lives. Augustine ridicules the idea. What do you suppose these men would say if we asked them whether they lived without sin?, he asks Pelagius. As for Mary, says Augustine, I do not wish to query Pelagius’ claim that she was winless ‘out of honour to the Lord’. When discussing her further he is careful to point out that for this sinlessness to be attained, grace for overcoming sin had to be given ‘in every particular’ (omni ex parte). It is important to observe what Augustine says is not that she could not sin, but that grace was given to her in every particular of life so that the ever-present possibility of sin was overcome. It appears that Augustine’s view of the grace accorded to her should be compared with his view of the situation of Adam . . . it is sufficient to observe that both Adam and Mary seem, for Augustine, to have had the possibility of sinning (posse peccare) but that Mary was given the grace which prevented that possibility from becoming actualized.

 

Mary, in Augustine’s view, is a special case. In general he seems to have held that good men, even those who enjoy the grace of perseverance to the end, are liable to failure in particular actions. As a result of the permanent weakness of fallen man, a weakness which is not removed by baptism, the life even of the saint is a series of failures and successes. Not only is the saint able to sin, but he actually sins. Only after death is the stage reached in which sin is impossible (non posse peccare) and freedom (libertas) is attained. (John M. Rist, “Augustine on Free Will and Predestination,” in Augustine: A Collection of Critical Essays, ed. R. A. Markus [Modern Studies in Philosophy; New York: Anchor Books, 1972], 225-26, emphasis in bold added)

 

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