Tuesday, October 8, 2024

Michael W. Holmes on the Authorship of the Epistle to Diognetus

  

Authorship and Date

 

The author of The Epistle to Diognetus writes with skill and perception and is as concerned with style as content. The purpose and plan of the work are fairly clear: the author seeks to answer three specific inquiries regarding the nature and significance of the Christian faith (sec. 1). The answers given betray the author’s deep indebtedness to both Hellenism and Judaism, but everything that has been borrowed has been put to use within a distinctly Christian perspective and for a clear missionary purpose. In many respects the author anticipates later Alexandrian writers.

 

Beyond this, much about this document remains a mystery. The author is anonymous, the identity of the recipient is uncertain, the date is unknown, the ending is missing, and, rather surprisingly, no ancient or medieval writer is known to have mentioned it.

 

. . .

 

The date of the document is a matter of conjecture as well. Reasonable suggestions range from 117 to after 313. Between 150 and 224 seems the most likely; Lightfoot, Meecham, and Frend favor the earlier of these dates, while R. M. Grant places it somewhat later. (Michael W. Holmes, The Apostolic Fathers: Greek and English Translations [3d ed.; Grand Rapids, Mich.: Baker Academic, 2007], 687-68, 689)

 

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