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Epiphanius of Cyprus was lead bishop of the island from 367 until his
death in 403, and he was a contemporary of several of the great church
fathers of the patristic era, including Athanasius, Basil, and Jerome. He
is well known among modern scholars for his monumental heresiology,
the Panarion, as well as for his involvement in several ecclesiastical and
theological controversies. Before he began to write his magnum opus,
however, he had already completed the Ancoratus, an important theological treatise, written in the form of a letter to Christians in southern
Anatolia. The Ancoratus addressed numerous theological issues, particularly in response to the continuous disputes about the divinity of
the Son, the developing arguments over the divinity of the Holy Spirit,
and the early quarrels over the Incarnation of Christ. In addition, he
included his thoughts on proper biblical exegesis, the problematic theology of Origen, and the relationship of the Christian faith with Hellenistic culture. Epiphanius's convictions on these issues represented
important contributions to the ongoing theological and cultural controversies of the late fourth century, but he has often been overshadowed
in modern scholarship by the work of his more illustrious contemporaries. Because there has been no complete English translation of the
Ancoratus to date, this volume adds significantly to the resources available for patristic studies.
ABOUT THE TRANSLATOR
Young Richard Kim is chair of the Classics Department at Calvin College.
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