tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5008517438604159901.post1247086344914196964..comments2024-03-10T06:20:10.198+00:00Comments on Markus Vinzent's Blog: Women in early ChristianityProfessor Markus Vinzenthttp://www.blogger.com/profile/18207418071078727708noreply@blogger.comBlogger3125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5008517438604159901.post-56596945180956671922013-04-25T10:57:28.204+01:002013-04-25T10:57:28.204+01:00Very insightful article... Very insightful article... Anonymoushttps://www.blogger.com/profile/13173090284867001042noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5008517438604159901.post-88999089914947513252013-03-22T10:10:11.623+00:002013-03-22T10:10:11.623+00:00Hi
Thank you for sharing such article with us, i ...Hi<br /><br />Thank you for sharing such article with us, i am also confused between Marcion's coming to Rome under Anicetus and Marcellina's contemporary arrival? Jerome seems to think that Marcellina was a Marcionite. <br /><br />Thank you<br /><a href="http://job-des-criptions.com/" rel="nofollow">job descriptions</a>Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5008517438604159901.post-59998591873160566892013-03-02T22:13:17.219+00:002013-03-02T22:13:17.219+00:00It is important to remember that the person most s...It is important to remember that the person most scandalized by the role of women in the Church seems to be Irenaeus, the man who came to define 'orthodoxy' for the next period of the religion. My sense is that Irenaeus is reacting to Celsus's characterizing the religion being entirely dependent on the testimony of 'hysterical women.' In one sense Celsus means the gospel account of the resurrection certainly. But it also extends to the account of Marcellina the 'Carpocratian.' <br /><br />Has some confusion arisen between Marcion's coming to Rome under Anicetus and Marcellina's contemporary arrival? Jerome seems to think that Marcellina was a Marcionite. If someone could explain the linguistic relationship between 'Marcellina' and 'Marcion' one might be able to explain the rise of orthodoxy as a reaction against the prominent role of women in Marcionitism. Stephan Hullerhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/07712300237611095445noreply@blogger.com