Updating Basket....

Sign In
0 Items

BASKET SUMMARY

There are currently no items added to the basket
Sign In
0 Items

BASKET SUMMARY

There are currently no items added to the basket

Great Medieval Commentary

A Translation and Annotation of the glossa ordinaria on the Gospel of Matthew

Great Medieval Commentary

A Translation and Annotation of the glossa ordinaria on the Gospel of Matthew

This item is currently unavailable.

Enter your email address below and we will email you when the item comes into stock.

Hardback

£64.00

Publisher: Emmaus Academic
ISBN: 9781945125201
Number of Pages: 304
Published: 30/11/2024
Width: 21.6 cm
Height: 27.9 cm
Although hardly known in the modern era, the Glossa Ordinaria was the most popular and influential biblical commentary of the Middle Ages, surviving in thousands of manuscripts and referenced constantly by Thomas Aquinas, Bonaventure, and other medieval schoolmen. Comprised chiefly of excerpts from the patristic exegesis of Augustine, Jerome, Gregory the Great, and many others, the Glossa stands as a unique witness and aid to reading Scripture within the Church's Tradition.

Based on the Latin text of the edition printed by Adoph Rusch, this first English translation of the Glossa on Genesis presents a wealth of patristic and medieval insight on the first book of the Old Testament, elucidating how the saving work of Christ was prefigured from "the beginning" in the events of Genesis.

Whether in manuscript or print form, one of the most distinctive elements of the Glossa Ordinaria is its layout, which features a central column of biblical text surrounded by marginal "glosses" or exegetical notes and interwoven with short interlinear glosses. This format has been retained in this new English translation of the Biblia cum Glossa Ordinaria, bringing the reader one step closer to encountering the Bible as its medieval readers did. - Carl E. Olson, Our Sunday Visitor

Samuel J. Klumpenhouwer

Samuel J. Klumpenhouwer holds a PhD in Medieval Studies from the University of Toronto. He specializes in the ecclesiastical and institutional history of medieval Europe, particularly the development of theology and canon law. His second, forthcoming, book is an introduction, critical edition, and translation of John of Kent's Summa de penitencia, a thirteenth-century manual for confessors that taught them the laws and theology of the Church, and trained them to exercise proper judgment (arbitrium) when administering the sacrament of confession. Dr. Klumpenhouwer teaches the liberal arts at Saint Teresa Catholic School in Sugar Land, Texas, where he lives with his wife and daughter, Mary Snow.