Ambrosiaster
AMBROSIASTER. A commentary on St Paul’s epistles, “brief in
words but weighty in matter,” and valuable for the criticism of the
Latin text of the New Testament, was long attributed to St Ambrose.
Erasmus in 1527 threw doubt on the accuracy of this ascription, and the
author is usually spoken of as Ambrosiaster or pseudo-Ambrose. Owing to
the fact that Augustine cites part of the commentary on Romans as by
“Sanctus Hilarius” it has been ascribed by various critics at different
times to almost every known Hilary. Dom G. Morin (Rev. d’hist. et de
litt. religiouses, tom. iv. 97 f.) broke new ground by suggesting in
1899 that the writer was Isaac, a converted Jew, writer of a tract on
the Trinity and Incarnation, who was exiled to Spain in 378-380 and then
relapsed to Judaism, but he afterwards abandoned this theory of the
authorship in favour of Decimus Hilarianus Hilarius, proconsul of Africa
in 377. With this attribution Professor Alex. Souter, in his Study of
Ambrosiaster (Cambridge Univ. Press, 1905), agrees. There is scarcely
anything to be said for the possibility of Ambrose having written the
book before he became a bishop, and added to it in later years,
incorporating remarks of Hilary of Poitiers on Romans. The best
presentation of the case for Ambrose is by P. A. Ballerini in his
complete edition of that father’s works.
In the book cited above Professor Souter also discusses the
authorship of the Quaestiones Veteris et Novi Testamenti, which
the MSS. ascribe to Augustine. He concludes, on very thorough
philological and other grounds, that this is with one possible slight
exception the work of the same “Ambrosiaster.” The same conclusion had
been arrived at previously by Dom Morin.
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