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23 - Maximus of Turin, Sermons 105–108

from Part IV - Policing the Community

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  19 May 2025

Bradley K. Storin
Affiliation:
Louisiana State University
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Summary

We know precious few facts about the life of Maximus of Turin. He was not a native of Turin, as Maximus himself implies in Sermon 33, and his clerical status upon arrival in the town is unclear. Gennadius of Marseilles’s On Illustrious Men (late fifth century) notes that Maximus was a bishop of Turin and that he died during the period when the reigns of the western emperor Honorius and the eastern emperor Theodosius II overlapped – that is, sometime between 408 and 423. Gennadius also describes Maximus as a competent preacher able to fit his discourse to any occasion or any biblical text. Neither a terribly significant figure from late antiquity nor the most gifted orator of his era, Maximus left behind a collection of more than a hundred sermons that, collectively, offer a glimpse into a rural Christian community in northern Italy during the late fourth and early fifth centuries. Here Maximus testifies to the region’s theological diversity; both heretics generally and “Arian heretics” specifically lurk around his community, as do pagans and lukewarm Christians. Indeed, he frequently complains directly to his congregation that they should attend his sermons with greater frequency.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2025

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