TY - JOUR
T1 - Severus of Antioch on Gender
T2 - The Evidence of his Cathedral Homilies
AU - Moss, Yonatan
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 Johns Hopkins University Press.
PY - 2025/6
Y1 - 2025/6
N2 - Leading anti-Chalcedonian theologian, Severus, served as patriarch of Antioch for under six years (512–518), before he was expelled by Chalcedonian emperor Justin I. Severus’s 125 Cathedral Homilies, delivered in Greek, survive mostly in Syriac, the language of the Syrian Orthodox Church, which adopted Severus as a founding figure. An examination of this corpus of homilies reveals Severus’s original outlook on gender, and his positive attitude to women, past and present. Severus proposes what may be called a “diachronic” model of gender. Unlike a “synchronic” model that bases gender distinctions on anatomical sex at any given moment in time, in Severus’s diachronic model gender distinctions are decoupled from sex, and are based instead on changes in time. There are periods in history where all people are women, and periods where all are men. Severus’s diachronic gender model is linked to his appreciation of “biological” women past and present whom he extols, and to his passionate argument against societally and traditionally accepted restrictions against women’s participation in certain parts of the liturgy. This article explores the contours, ramifications, and limitations of Severus’s novel outlook on gender, on women, and on men, as it emerges from his Cathedral Homilies.
AB - Leading anti-Chalcedonian theologian, Severus, served as patriarch of Antioch for under six years (512–518), before he was expelled by Chalcedonian emperor Justin I. Severus’s 125 Cathedral Homilies, delivered in Greek, survive mostly in Syriac, the language of the Syrian Orthodox Church, which adopted Severus as a founding figure. An examination of this corpus of homilies reveals Severus’s original outlook on gender, and his positive attitude to women, past and present. Severus proposes what may be called a “diachronic” model of gender. Unlike a “synchronic” model that bases gender distinctions on anatomical sex at any given moment in time, in Severus’s diachronic model gender distinctions are decoupled from sex, and are based instead on changes in time. There are periods in history where all people are women, and periods where all are men. Severus’s diachronic gender model is linked to his appreciation of “biological” women past and present whom he extols, and to his passionate argument against societally and traditionally accepted restrictions against women’s participation in certain parts of the liturgy. This article explores the contours, ramifications, and limitations of Severus’s novel outlook on gender, on women, and on men, as it emerges from his Cathedral Homilies.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=105008573495&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1353/earl.2025.a962352
DO - 10.1353/earl.2025.a962352
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AN - SCOPUS:105008573495
SN - 1067-6341
VL - 33
SP - 249
EP - 273
JO - Journal of Early Christian Studies
JF - Journal of Early Christian Studies
IS - 2
ER -