E02850: A Coptic Discourse of Shenoute (abbot of the White Monastery near Sohag in Upper Egypt) referring to the saints as judges; written in the 5th century.
online resource
posted on 2017-05-26, 00:00authored bygschenke
In his discourses entitled Some kinds of people sift dirt and Whoever seeks God will find (discourses 5, work 2 and 3), Shenoute mentions that the saints will act as powerful judges.
‘Let us be ashamed before the saints as if they were among us now, lest we fail to escape being blamed for foolishness by them on the day when we shall see them face to face, when they say to us these words: “Are these people the salt of the earth, who came after us?” and, “Are these people the light of the world?” and, “(Are they) words of freedom?”’
Translation: Brakke and Crislip 2017, 113.
A critical edition of the Coptic text is still pending.
Place of evidence - City name in other Language(s)
Panopolis
Hermopolis
ϣⲙⲟⲩⲛ
Ashmunein
Hermopolis
Major author/Major anonymous work
Shenoute of Atripe
Cult activities - Liturgical Activity
Sermon/homily
Cult activities - Places
Cult building - monastic
Source
Shenoute’s entire literary corpus, preserved in medieval manuscripts only, almost exclusively comes from a single find spot, a storeroom of the church at his ‘White’ monastery. A critical edition of this entire corpus of Shenoute's written work is still in preparation by S. Emmel and others.
Bibliography
Translation and Discussion:
Brakke, D., and Crislip, A., Selected Discourses of Shenoute the Great: Community, Theology, and Social Conflict in Late Antique Egypt (Cambridge, 2017), 106–117.