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The Fathers — and Your Batty Uncle

In reviewing my new book, A Year with the Church Fathers, David Scott at Catholic News Agency has written an appreciation of my work over the last decade and a half. He calls me “the unofficial family historian of the Catholic Church” and portrays me as the “eager younger brother” in God’s family — the family member who’s always pulling down old photo albums, letters and deeds. I’m profoundly moved by the review, though I’ve always pictured myself more as the batty uncle who embarrasses the family by showing up on the TV show “Hoarders.”

It’s a strange feeling having such a tribute come from a writer I’ve admired through most of my professional life. Non sum dignus. I can’t say I agree with David about the degree to which I’ve succeeded, but it’s gratifying to know that someone sees what I’m trying to do. It’s a long review, but here’s a snip.

The enthusiasm that Aquilina brings to his task is infectious, and he is diligent in sharing his discoveries. He blogs daily on Church history, archeology, and spirituality at FathersoftheChurch.com. His voice can be heard almost daily somewhere in America on some Catholic radio station. And he’s a familiar smiling face on EWTN, where he hosts regular series with his friend and colleague, the theologian Scott Hahn, with whom he founded the St. Paul Center for Biblical Theology a few years back.

Most scholars of “paleo-Christianity” — the first centuries of the Church — are word guys. They study the paper trail — homilies, letters, teaching manuals, works of theological disputation, even the court records kept by the persecutors of the early Church.

Aquilina loves the words, too. But he also finds the sermon in the stuff, the theology expressed in the little things that the first Christians left behind — fading murals on catacomb walls, pottery and dishware, pieces of coinage, ancient hymns and Mass prayers, common household items … The point is that for Aquilina, the little things matter — because they tell us big things about what Catholics believe and how they look at the world …

Aquilina’s latest book is his most beautiful and most ambitious.

“A Year with the Church Fathers” is a kind of culmination of Aquilina’s efforts to turn the water of archeology and scholarship into the new wine of piety, devotion, and spirituality.

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Christianity and the Roman World

At BMCR …

Benjamin Garstad reviews Miguel Herrero de Jáuregui’s Orphism and Christianity in Late Antiquity.

A. J. Droge reviews Laura Salah Nasrallah’s Christian Responses to Roman Art and Architecture: The Second-Century Church amid the Spaces of Empire.

Jan Willem Drijvers reviews a new edition of an ancient life of St. Helena (Constantine’s mum). Lots of interesting bits in the review.

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New — Nobel Prize in Patristics

CNS reports some good news for the future of patristic studies …

VATICAN CITY (CNS) — With the pope’s agreement and funding, the Joseph Ratzinger-Benedict XVI Vatican Foundation has been established to promote theological studies on his writings and to reward promising scholars.

Msgr. Giuseppe Antonio Scotti, president of the foundation, said it was established with just over $3.1 million from the pope. The money represents part of the royalties from the publication of his books…

Cardinal Camillo Ruini … said he hoped that someday the “Ratzinger Prizes” in sacred Scripture, patristics and fundamental theology “would be considered as something analogous to a Nobel Prize for theology.”

Get your nominations in right away — before President Obama wins them all. Or maybe that season for that is over.