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The Commonitorium or Commonitory is a 5th-century Christian treatise written after the council of Ephesus under the pseudonym "Peregrinus" and attributed to Vincent of Lérins. It is known for Vincent's famous maxim: "Moreover, in the Catholic Church itself, all possible care must be taken, that we hold that faith which has been believed everywhere, always, by all." * by universality – of the whole Church * by antiquity – held from the earliest times * by consent – acknowledged belief of all, or of almost all, whose office and character gave authority to their decision

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  • Commonitory (en)
  • Commonitorium (Vinzenz von Lérins) (de)
  • Commonitorium (fr)
  • Canone di Vincenzo di Lerino (it)
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  • Das Commonitorium ist eine theologische Schrift des altkirchlichen Mönchstheologen Vinzenz von Lérins. Er schrieb dieses Commonitorium mit der Verfasserangabe Peregrinus („ein Pilger“) im Jahr 434. Es ist die einzige Schrift, für die seine Autorschaft als gesichert gilt. Berühmt und, vor allem bei den Kontroverstheologen des 16. und 17. Jahrhunderts, viel zitiert ist es wegen seiner klassischen Formulierung des katholischen Traditionsprinzips. (de)
  • Per Canone di Vincenzo di Lerino si intende un passo estratto dal Commonitorium in cui questo monaco ha cercato di stabilire una regola di fede universalmente valida. (it)
  • The Commonitorium or Commonitory is a 5th-century Christian treatise written after the council of Ephesus under the pseudonym "Peregrinus" and attributed to Vincent of Lérins. It is known for Vincent's famous maxim: "Moreover, in the Catholic Church itself, all possible care must be taken, that we hold that faith which has been believed everywhere, always, by all." * by universality – of the whole Church * by antiquity – held from the earliest times * by consent – acknowledged belief of all, or of almost all, whose office and character gave authority to their decision (en)
  • Le Commonitorium (ou Aide-mémoire) fut écrit en latin par saint Vincent de Lérins sous le surnom de Peregrinus, peut-être trois années après le concile d’Éphèse (431). Vincent était moine à l'abbaye de Lérins. Vincent en définit ainsi l'objectif : « Ici commence le traité de Peregrinus pour l'antiquité et l'universalité de la foi catholique (au sens étymologique d'universelle, c'est-à-dire originelle) contre les nouveautés profanes de toutes les hérésies ». « Quod ubique, quod semper, quod ab omnibus »« Tenir pour vérité de foi ce qui a été cru partout, toujours et par tous ». (fr)
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  • Commonitorium (en)
  • Commonitory (en)
name
  • Commonitory (en)
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  • Peregrinus (en)
congress
  • BR65 .V4 (en)
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  • Latin (en)
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  • Print (en)
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  • la (en)
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  • Commonitorium (en)
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  • Reginald S. Moxon (en)
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  • Das Commonitorium ist eine theologische Schrift des altkirchlichen Mönchstheologen Vinzenz von Lérins. Er schrieb dieses Commonitorium mit der Verfasserangabe Peregrinus („ein Pilger“) im Jahr 434. Es ist die einzige Schrift, für die seine Autorschaft als gesichert gilt. Berühmt und, vor allem bei den Kontroverstheologen des 16. und 17. Jahrhunderts, viel zitiert ist es wegen seiner klassischen Formulierung des katholischen Traditionsprinzips. (de)
  • The Commonitorium or Commonitory is a 5th-century Christian treatise written after the council of Ephesus under the pseudonym "Peregrinus" and attributed to Vincent of Lérins. It is known for Vincent's famous maxim: "Moreover, in the Catholic Church itself, all possible care must be taken, that we hold that faith which has been believed everywhere, always, by all." Charles Heurtley introduced the Commonitory, in his translation, as Vincent's personal reference to "distinguish Catholic truth from heresy" based on the authority of Holy Scripture by which "all questions must be tried in the first instance" and "supplemented by an appeal to that sense of Holy Scripture which is supported by universality, antiquity, and consent." * by universality – of the whole Church * by antiquity – held from the earliest times * by consent – acknowledged belief of all, or of almost all, whose office and character gave authority to their decision Thomas Guarino commented, in Vincent of Lérins and the Development of Christian Doctrine, that Vincent of Lérins' theology "is often reduced to a memorable slogan: 'We hold that faith which has been believed everywhere, always, and by everyone.'" Bernard Prusak explained in The Church Unfinished, that for Vincent, "the decrees of a universal council were to be preferred to the ignorance of a few" and the deposit of faith "did not exclude development or progress, as long as it was not an alteration" and accordingly, doctrines "could be taught in a new way." Most of the work contains illustrations and applications of this principle. The work consisted originally of two tomes; but the second was lost or, according to Gennadius of Massilia, stolen while Vincent was still alive, and he wrote only a synopsis of the lost tome's contents but never rewrote it. (en)
  • Le Commonitorium (ou Aide-mémoire) fut écrit en latin par saint Vincent de Lérins sous le surnom de Peregrinus, peut-être trois années après le concile d’Éphèse (431). Vincent était moine à l'abbaye de Lérins. Vincent en définit ainsi l'objectif : « Ici commence le traité de Peregrinus pour l'antiquité et l'universalité de la foi catholique (au sens étymologique d'universelle, c'est-à-dire originelle) contre les nouveautés profanes de toutes les hérésies ». Vincent propose trois critères : l’universalité, l’antiquité et l’unanimité pour discerner le vrai du faux, uniquement quand on a un "doute" sur la foi, précise-t-il : « Quod ubique, quod semper, quod ab omnibus »« Tenir pour vérité de foi ce qui a été cru partout, toujours et par tous ». Vincent ajoute qu’il existe un progrès dans les sciences théologiques, mais toujours : « selon leur nature particulière, c’est-à-dire dans le même dogme, dans le même sens, et dans la même pensée ». Ceci peut se résumer par l'expression suivante : « l'évolution homogène du dogme ». Ce document apparaît, de plus, comme un témoignage intéressant de l'érudition des prélats du Ve siècle, et de l'histoire de l'Église. (fr)
  • Per Canone di Vincenzo di Lerino si intende un passo estratto dal Commonitorium in cui questo monaco ha cercato di stabilire una regola di fede universalmente valida. (it)
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  • BR65 .V4
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