
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


An Interview with Dr. Jennifer Barry
The dramatic story of Bishop John Chrysostom's two exiles and subsequent death (in the 4th century) is tangled up with the Empress Eudoxia and her miscarriages. It was known that diseases spread the same way internal corruption spreads through communities rather quickly, so uncertainty of not knowing who is heretical and who has a disease made the easy association between heresy and disease. Therefore Eudoxia's suffering and death became the scapegoat for Chrysostom's theological missteps.
By Early Christian Texts4.5
2626 ratings
An Interview with Dr. Jennifer Barry
The dramatic story of Bishop John Chrysostom's two exiles and subsequent death (in the 4th century) is tangled up with the Empress Eudoxia and her miscarriages. It was known that diseases spread the same way internal corruption spreads through communities rather quickly, so uncertainty of not knowing who is heretical and who has a disease made the easy association between heresy and disease. Therefore Eudoxia's suffering and death became the scapegoat for Chrysostom's theological missteps.

91,174 Listeners

576 Listeners

4,798 Listeners

609 Listeners

113,300 Listeners

342 Listeners

4,171 Listeners

1,664 Listeners

66,485 Listeners

3,359 Listeners

16,494 Listeners

132 Listeners

685 Listeners

221 Listeners

1,462 Listeners