I have just recently discovered your channel. While I very much appreciate more scholarly videos, I enjoy your shorter introductions to the great Church fathers.
Are you sure? There's a new book _The Life of Saint Dionysus the Areopagite_ by Scriptorium Press that argues he really did write it. Craig Truglia wrote blog post summarizing arguments in book.
His encyclopedic knowledge of both Old and New Testament scriptures argues for someone who lived later than the sporadic distribution of the New testament letters and St. John's Apocalypse. It also argues for a writer who came to his knowledge of the Old Testament much earlier in life than the Dionysius of St. Paul's Mars Hill sermon. I own the book you mention, but I have yet to read it. I am interested in what Truglia argues. OH, AND Pseudo-Dionysius, in the Divine Names, cites St. Ignatius, who died in 140 AD.
I have just recently discovered your channel. While I very much appreciate more scholarly videos, I enjoy your shorter introductions to the great Church fathers.
I’m enjoying this series very much God bless you
Love it. Thank you.
Are you sure? There's a new book _The Life of Saint Dionysus the Areopagite_ by Scriptorium Press that argues he really did write it. Craig Truglia wrote blog post summarizing arguments in book.
His encyclopedic knowledge of both Old and New Testament scriptures argues for someone who lived later than the sporadic distribution of the New testament letters and St. John's Apocalypse. It also argues for a writer who came to his knowledge of the Old Testament much earlier in life than the Dionysius of St. Paul's Mars Hill sermon.
I own the book you mention, but I have yet to read it. I am interested in what Truglia argues.
OH, AND Pseudo-Dionysius, in the Divine Names, cites St. Ignatius, who died in 140 AD.
A name so nice they named him twice
😊❤
Dyonisius is English "Dennis" . I looked it up long ago so am going by memory.