Patristic Recommends

A reader writes:

I’ve been studying Catholic teaching and am considering becoming a Roman Catholic.  My question is: what resources ought one actually read the early fathers in?  The snippets on Catholic.com  are helpful but I am seeking a broad base understanding.

There are several different resources that I could recommend. It depends on what you are looking for.

The main problem is that the writings of the Chruch Fathers are so voluminous that one person could spend years reading them. If you’re actually up for that, the most easily available set is a 38-volume set produced in the 19th century that, since it is public domain, is now online at a number of locations, such as www.newadvent.org.

Even this set, though, is not complete. There are other works of the Fathers not found in it. (And, as one Baptist pastor who later became Catholic noted to me, it sometimes excludes some of the more Catholic-leaning works since the editors were Protestant.)

If you’re looking for a broad summary but not the texts themselves then there is a 4-volume set called Patrology by Johannes Quaesten.

What I’d really recommend if you’re looking for a summary, though, is the 1-volume setbook Ealy Christian Doctrines by J.N.D. Kelly. Kelly is a Protestant, but he’s very good about admitting how Catholic the early Fathers were.

If you’re looking for texts (shorter than the 38-volume set) rather than summaries then I’d have to main recommendations.

The first is a 3-volume set called Faith of the Early Fathers by William Jurgens. It is like the excerpts on Catholic.Com except that it isn’t organized by topic. Instead, it proceeds in historical order from Father to Father, giving passages that the different Fathers said on particular subjects. The passages also (often) are longer than the ones on Catholic.Com and will give you a broader selection of what the Fathers were saying on different topics, as well as more of the context.

If you want whole documents but aren’t up for a long set, I’d recommend Early Christian Writings, edited by Maxwell Staniforth. This is a 1-volume edition of writings from the first and second centuries. It was very helpful to me when I was becoming Catholic, though it suffers from two problems: (1) It only covers a very small handful of documents compared to those that are out there (which is why it can offer whole documents while remaining 1 volume long) and (2) the period it covers is so early that the Church hadn’t yet had a chance to thoroughly reflect on what had been given to it by Christ and the apostles and so there are a lot of imprecise and, at times, even bizzare things. You won’t get as many of the crisply formulated expressions of theology that you will from later ages. Still, it’s quite valuable and contains things like Clement’s and Ignatius’s letters, as well as the Didache.

Following up with any of these recommendations will give you clues about what you may want to investigate next. For example, if you do some reading in Quaesten or Jurgens or Kelly then you’ll learn about documents that you may want to look up and read in more detail in the 38-volume set.

Hope this helps, and God bless!

Author: Jimmy Akin

Jimmy was born in Texas, grew up nominally Protestant, but at age 20 experienced a profound conversion to Christ. Planning on becoming a Protestant seminary professor, he started an intensive study of the Bible. But the more he immersed himself in Scripture the more he found to support the Catholic faith, and in 1992 he entered the Catholic Church. His conversion story, "A Triumph and a Tragedy," is published in Surprised by Truth. Besides being an author, Jimmy is the Senior Apologist at Catholic Answers, a contributing editor to Catholic Answers Magazine, and a weekly guest on "Catholic Answers Live."

8 thoughts on “Patristic Recommends”

  1. I have Early Christian Doctrines (fifth Edition) by J.N.D Kelly.
    My parish priest met him, told me he is a ‘right character’…and then laughed heartily promising to tell me a tale or two about him sometime…I’m intrigued.
    My parish priest is also a teacher amongst other things, and informed me that he had to read this book when he undertook his Theology Degree…this alarmed me somewhat as when we spoke I was on my first Catechist Study Day and it frightened me silly to think how in depth this whole thing was going to be (Early Christian Doctrines being one of the recommended reading materials).
    Jimmy, while on the subject, can I ask for your take on ‘The Christian Faith -in the Doctrinal Document’s of the Catholic Church’ -edited by Jacques Dupius.
    This was another book on the recommended reading list, but in dialogue with friends about it, some haven’t had very good things to say about it claiming that Dupius has liberalistic tendencies..what sayeth thou ?
    It cost me a lot of money, I’m hoping to make good use of it, but I believe it to be more of a reference type book, though I haven’t delved too deeply into it at this point, I’m getting better acquainted with my GDC at the moment.
    God Bless.

  2. Take a look at “The Teachings of the Church Fathers”, by John Willis.
    It is published by Ignatius Press.

  3. I don’t think it was a dumb question at all. It’s been a while since I looked the Dupuis work (sometimes referred to as “Neuner-Dupuis” from the older editions), but from my recollection, it seemed to be basically a re-worked version of the Denzinger-Schonmetzer work, except that the selections of text are arranged thematically and not chronologically. It would be a good reference to have.

  4. Bill,
    thanks for responding to my question, I appreciate your taking the time to comment and I’m glad that you think I haven’t wasted my money! 🙂
    God Bless.

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