Some, Not Others
The History of the Christian Church
sanctorum.us
4.6 • 790 Ratings
🗓️ 14 January 2018
⏱️ 10 minutes
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| 0:00.0 | This is Communio Sanctorum, the history of the Christian Church, season two. |
| 0:14.9 | The title of this episode is Some, Not Others. |
| 0:19.1 | I think I'm on safe ground when I say that those listening to this are most |
| 0:23.4 | likely students of history. Your knowledge of the past is probably more comprehensive than the |
| 0:28.5 | average person. And of course, the range of knowledge among subscribers to CS spans the gamut |
| 0:34.8 | from extensive to, well, not so much. |
| 0:40.4 | Yet still, more than the average. |
| 0:47.2 | If asked to make a list of the main thinkers of the past, philosophers, theologians, and such like, of Western tradition, |
| 0:49.4 | we'd likely get the usual. |
| 0:57.8 | Socrates, Plato, Aristotle, Seneca, Cicero, Virgil, Clement, Origin, Augustine, and Aquinas. |
| 1:05.5 | A name far less likely to make that list is the subject of this episode. Though he's not often mentioned in modern treatments of church and philosophical history, his work was a major contributor to medieval thought, |
| 1:13.5 | which was the seedbed from which the modern world rose. |
| 1:17.6 | His full name was Anisius Manlius Torquatus Severinus, but he's known to us simply as Boethius. |
| 1:26.2 | Born to a Roman senatorial family somewhere between 475 and 80 in Italy, |
| 1:32.2 | Boetheus was left an orphan at an early age. He was adopted by another patrician, |
| 1:38.0 | Memius Simicus, who instilled in the young man a love of literature and philosophy. |
| 1:44.0 | Simicus made sure that Boethius learned the vanishing skill of literacy in Greek. |
| 1:49.8 | With the split between the Eastern and Western Roman Empire is now settled |
| 1:53.7 | and the fall of the Western Empire to the Goths, |
| 1:57.3 | it seems that Greek, primary language of the East, |
| 2:04.5 | fell into disuse in favor of Latin in the West. |
| 2:11.9 | Greek became increasingly the language of scholars and those, well, who were suspected of lingering loyalty to the East. |
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