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Patristics Chrisitian Classics Ethereal Library: An attempt to alphabetize and provide links to all of the Christian Literature on the Internet. Thus, it includes not only the great writers of the Church as recorded in the 38 Volume set of the Ante Nicene, Nicene and Post Nicene Fathers, and the novels of Dostoevsky, but also such dubious wild-eyed scholasticized Augustinians as John Calvin and such various of his camp followers as the proto-phenomenologist Jonathan Edwards. New Advent Catholic Supersite: English translations of some of the Church Fathers, drawn from the 38 Volume Edinborough edition (affectionately known to many of us as the Eerdmann's Series) Patriarchal Institute for Patristic Studies: Thessaloniki St. Pachomius Library: A subsection of Michael Vezie's Orthodox Page in America. A small but worthwhile and FREE collection of basic reading material which includes lives of saints as well as theological discourses and apologetics The Mount Athos Greek Manuscripts Catalog: The Philotheou Monastery Project: A division of the Mount Athos Greek manuscripts Catalog Project of the Patriarchal Institute of Patristic Studies, Thessaloniki, located at Bates College. Daniel Ridings on St. John Chrysostom: The background work for an "edition in progress" of St. John Chrysostom's Ad Stagirium a Daemone Vexatum. Those who think that textual criticism is a creative and artistic endeavor will find much of this edifying. The Apostolic Fathers: The earliest Post apostolic witness of the Church. If you want to find out what happened after the Book of Acts, you start here. Apostolic Fathers: Searchable Index to the Apostolic Fathers Internet Medieval Sourcebook: Paul Halsall's collection of links for source materials covering (very) approximately the period between the fall of Rome and the Italian Renaissance -- funny how much western scholarship still insists that the center of the world is in the boot. Guide to Early Church Documents The Church Fathers Homepage: Yet another posting of the Pre-Nicean, Nicean, and Post-Nicean Fathers to the WWW. St. Gregory the Great: Commentary on the Book of Job |
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