This review, by Sam Noble, appeared in Logos: A Journal of Eastern Christian Studies 57.1-4 (2016): 309-327. The entire review is available here.
Nevertheless, even as
he expertly explains the peculiarities of the Questions in relation to
the broader corpus of Byzantine canon law, Viscuso fails to situate the text
within its Middle Eastern dimension. In particular, he does not even so
much as cite any of the substantial literature on Melkite canonical collections
and the history of the reception of Byzantine legal texts among Middle Eastern
Christians.
This leads to a reading of the text that, while grounded in the history of Byzantine
law, makes very little effort to understand it in terms beyond Balsamon’s own limited
horizons. In choosing to give his translation the title Guide for a Church
under Islam, Viscuso highlights precisely the dimension of the text that he
least examines.
[...]
Read the rest here.
Patrick Demetrius
Viscuso, Guide for a Church under Islām: The Sixty-Six Canonical Questions
Attributed to Thodōros Balsamōn (Brookline, MA: Holy Cross Orthodox Press,
2014)
In 1195, the people of
Constantinople were witness to a singularly rare event. Patriarch Mark III of
Alexandria (r. 1180-1209), visiting from Muslim-controlled Egypt, concelebrated
the liturgy at Hagia Sophia with the Patriarch of Constantinople, George II
Xiphilinos (r. 1191-1198), and the Patriarch of Antioch, Theodore Balsamon (r.
1193-after 1195). Much to the shock of his fellow patriarchs, he attempted to
serve the traditional liturgy of his see, the Liturgy of Saint Mark but they
prevented from doing so. It seems that this incident brought to the attention
of everyone involved that practices in the Churches of Constantinople and
Alexandria diverged on a wide variety of points and so Mark submitted to the
patriarch and synod of Constantinople a list of sixty-six questions for
clarification. The end result of this was a series of questions and responses
prepared by Balsamon (a native of Constantinople who, though officially the
absentee patriarch of Antioch, seems to have never left the city) on the
synod’s behalf.
The issue of cultural,
linguistic, and liturgical diversity and uniformity is a perennial point of
contention in the Orthodox churches and so Patrick Demetrius Viscuso’s
translation of Balsamon’s Sixty-Six Canonical Questions under the title Guide
for a Church under Islam is a welcome contribution to the history of how
the Byzantine Church understood Orthodox Christians living outside the
boundaries of the empire. Throughout the volume, Viscuso demonstrates his expertise
in Byzantine canon law by thoroughly cross-referencing passages from the Questions
to the entire corpus of Balsamon’s works as well as to other pertinent Byzantine
legal texts. He also provides extensive notes explaining the reasoning behind
some of the more difficult-to-understand rulings, such as the Galenic theory
lying behind the prohibition against communing on the same day as having bathed
(78-80), as well as several of the rulings related to marriage, sexuality and gender
in a manner that is clear and accessible for non-specialists. However, the
reader might have appreciated further explanation of two of Balsamon’s more disturbing
rulings, permitting a man to sell off a female slave with whom he has
fornicated (118) and declaring betrothal to a girl of seven to be valid on the
grounds that girls of that age are subject to concupiscence (119)
[...]
The Questions are doubtless an important source
for the history of Byzantine canon law—especially as regards important
contemporary issues such as the question of deaconesses, the reception of
converts, and relations with the non-Orthodox-- and Viscuso has performed a
great service in producing this clear, accessible English translation.
Nevertheless, as is very often the case in studies of both Byzantium and the
Christian Middle East, we are in need of further basic philological work in
order to be able to have a proper understanding of this text. Without a
critical edition of both versions of the Questions and a comprehensive
comparison between them, it is difficult to tease out what in belongs to Mark
and his Melkite Alexandrian context and what belongs to Balsamon. One can indeed
discern some echoes of the daily life and problems of medieval Melkites from
the text presented in this volume, but by and large these echoes are drowned
out by Balsamon’s wholly Constantinopolitan frame of reference. Rather than an
authentic “guide for a church under Islam,” what we have here is a foundational
text in the Byzantine imaginary of Orthodoxy outside the bounds of empire.
Read the rest here.
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