St. John Chrysostom’s Adversus Judaeos

Homily VII

40 min · 15 de ene de 2026
Portada del episodio Homily VII

Descripción

Homily VII of John Chrysostom's Adversus Judaeos (delivered ca. 387 CE in Antioch) argues that Jewish rituals and worship are permanently invalidated due to the destruction of the Temple and ongoing exile. Chrysostom examines Old Testament rites (e.g., the ordeal of bitter water for suspected adultery from Numbers 5) that required the Temple, altar, and sacrifices—now impossible. He extends this to prove no restoration of priesthood, kingship, or full Mosaic Law is possible, as Jewish subjugation contradicts scriptural promises. He harshly depicts current Jewish gatherings as immoral and unworthy, urging Christians to shun them completely to avoid defilement and maintain separation. The homily reinforces divine rejection of post-Christ Judaism.

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9 episodios

episode Homily VIII artwork

Homily VIII

Homily VIII of John Chrysostom's Adversus Judaeos (delivered ca. 387 CE in Antioch) addresses Christians seeking healing from Jewish incantations, amulets, and healers during illnesses like fevers. Chrysostom condemns this as idolatry and betrayal of Christ, urging endurance of suffering as a trial that tests faith—like gold in fire—and can lead to martyrdom. He contrasts biblical figures (e.g., the paralytic at the pool, Lazarus) who suffered without relief yet gained eternal reward, with Judaizers who run to "Christ-killers" for cures. He portrays Jewish practices as demonic and ineffective, calling for total avoidance to preserve Christian purity. The homily promotes an "anti-medicinal" stance: embrace fever as a path to heavenly glory rather than seek forbidden aid.

19 de ene de 202654 min
episode Homily IV artwork

Homily IV

Homily IV of John Chrysostom's Adversus Judaeos (delivered ca. 387 CE in Antioch) focuses on deterring Christians from joining Jews in observing the upcoming Trumpets festival (Rosh Hashanah) and associated fasts. Chrysostom warns in advance to fortify souls against this "accursed and unlawful" practice, arguing that Jewish fasts lack divine sanction post-Christ and are worse than drunkenness. He invokes Elijah's rebuke ("How long will you limp on both legs?") to urge decisive commitment to Christ over Judaism. He sharply criticizes Judaizers for associating with those who crucified Christ, blames not only participants but also those who fail to stop them, and uses scriptural proofs to portray Jewish observances as obsolete and defiling. The homily stresses firm separation to avoid spiritual peril.

5 de ene de 202639 min