In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:

Reviewed by:
  • Historiam perscrutari: Miscellanea di studi offerti al prof. Ottorino Pasquato
  • Augustine Casiday
Historiam perscrutari: Miscellanea di studi offerti al prof. Ottorino Pasquato. Edited by Mario Maritano. [Biblioteca di Scienze Religiose, 180.] (Rome: Editrice L.A. S.2002. Pp. 882. €50,00 paperback.)

Ottorino Pasquato, S.D.B., is professor emeritus in the Università Pontificia Salesiana, where for nearly a quarter of a century he taught ancient and medieval church history and related subjects. The Festschrift under review presents over fifty studies that make contributions to the many domains to which Don Ottorino has himself contributed over his long and fruitful career. (His numerous publications are detailed in the bibliography; see pages 31-39.) To give a sense of the scope of this book, it may be helpful to say a word about Pasquato's academic formation: he completed a laurea in ecclesiastical history at the Gregorian University with a thesis on paganism and Christianity in [End Page 885] Antioch and Constantinople with reference to the works of St. John Chrysostom (1973), and a second laurea in philosophy at the University of Padua with a thesis on Christian historiography in the writings of Henri-Irénée Marrou (1979). Accordingly, the major themes in this book include history, theology, and Christianity (Part I), religious historiography (Part II), catechesis in history (Part III), and finally the Fathers in ecclesiastical tradition (Part IV).

The contents are so rich and varied as to resist satisfactory summarization. It may suffice instead to mention a sample of the noteworthy chapters. In Part I, there are insightful contributions on Christology in different cultures (M. Bordoni), de Lubac's historiography (G. Coffele), and the ecumenical "reconciliation of memories" as a historiographical issue (L. Sartori). Two chapters on ancient historiography—monasticism and episcopacy in late antiquity (M. Forlin Patrucco) and late antiquity in Italian scholarship (G. Penco)—as well as two on H.-I. Marrou (P. Chenaux and J.-I. Saranyana) stand out in Part II. M. Dujarier's analysis of terms used to describe the process of becoming Christ's disciple is a typically wide-ranging example of the close textual work displayed throughout Part III. And in the fourth and final section, there are excellent chapters on broad themes (e.g., M. Spanneut on divine apatheia) and on particular fathers (e.g., P. Allen on Severus of Antioch), as well as ten chapters on John Chrysostom in particular (among which I. Oñatibia's chapter is especially good).

There is a great deal to be admired in the chapters of this book. For instance, I have only alluded to the direct treatment of contemporary theological concerns, such as ecumenical engagement and the transformations of Christianity in Africa, Asia, and South America. But what I found most important in the book was its balanced representation of scholarly research into antiquity and scholarly reflection on that research. Both of these elements enrich the theological project as a whole, and it is gratifying to seem them so well integrated here. Festschriften sometimes lack coherence, but that is not a problem that affects this collection, which is unified by the emphasis on history, theologically considered. As Cardinal Poupard rightly claims in his foreword to the book, it offers an "invitation to understand the past better in order to live a fuller and more balanced life in the present" (p. 23). It is recommended.

Augustine Casiday
University of Wales, Lampeter
...

pdf

Share