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In this volume, John Behr treats the first three centuries of the Christian era. Part I examines the establishment of Christianity in the first century based on the tradition of the Gospel, and briefly sketches the scriptural Christ as inscribed in the New Testament. Part II analyzes selected figures from the second century—Ignatius of Antioch, Justin Martyr, and Irenaeus of Lyons—considering...

describe the ultimate structures of “reality,” to elaborate a fundamental ontology, whether of “Being” or “communion,” which then comes to constitute the content of revelation itself, so substituting the explanation for that which it attempts to explain. Rather, the aim of the theological project responding to Christ’s question is to articulate, in the face of perceived aberrations, the canon of truth as precisely as possible, constantly returning, as Polycarp urged his readers in the early second
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