Clement of Alexandria: Where Christianity Met Philosophy
150-215 AD: The Intellectual Defense of a Revolutionary Faith
When Greek philosophers dismissed Christianity as superstition and Gnostic heretics twisted its teachings, Clement of Alexandria stood at the crossroads. As a teacher at Alexandria's famous Catechetical School, he achieved the impossible: demonstrating that Christianity could claim philosophical high ground without compromising doctrine.
What You'll Discover
Clement's systematic refutation of paganism and his battles against Valentinus, Basilides, and other Gnostic teachers. His revolutionary synthesis of faith and philosophy in works like the Protrepticus, Paedagogus, and Stromata. How Alexandria's unique intellectual culture shaped Christian theology. Why the Severan persecution of 202 AD forced his exile and ended Alexandria's golden age of scholarship.
Serious Scholarship, Accessible Writing
This book grounds its narrative in primary sources while exploring how Clement's solutions to second-century problems remain relevant today. His synthesis established principles that guided Christian intellectual life for centuries.
For students of early Christianity, patristic theology, ancient philosophy, and anyone seeking to understand how Christian intellectual tradition began.
The early Church fathers built Christianity's intellectual foundations. This is how one of the greatest did his work.