Wednesday, April 22, 2009

Clement Of Alexandria

Clement Of Alexandria (150-215)

Clement Of Alexandria (150-215) title=

Titus Flavius Clemens (c.150 - c. 215), known as Clement of Alexandria (to distinguish him from Clement of Rome), was a Christian theologian and the head of the noted Catechetical School of Alexandria. Clement is best remembered as the teacher of Origen. He united Greek philosophical traditions with Christian doctrine and valued gnosis that with communion for all people could be held by common Christians specially chosen by God. Though he constantly opposes the concept of gnosis as defined by the Gnostics, he used the term "gnostic" for Christians who had attained the deeper teaching of the Logos. He developed a Christian Platonism. He presented the goal of Christian life as deification, identified both as Platonism's assimilation into God and the biblical imitation of God. Like Origen, he arose from Alexandria's Catechetical School and was well versed in pagan literature. Origen succeeded Clement as head of the school. Alexandria had a major Christian community in early Christianity, noted for its scholarship and its high-quality copies of Scripture. Clement is counted as one of the early Church Fathers. He advocated a vegetarian diet and claimed that the apostles Peter, Matthew, and James the Just were vegetarians.



[Exhortation To The Heathen | The Instructor V1 | The Instructor V2 | The Instructor V3 | The Stromata Or Miscellanies V1 | The Stromata Or Miscellanies V2 | The Stromata Or Miscellanies V3 | The Stromata Or Miscellanies V4 | The Stromata Or Miscellanies V5 | The Stromata Or Miscellanies V6 | The Stromata Or Miscellanies V7 | The Stromata Or Miscellanies V8]

No comments:

Post a Comment