Marriage as a Social Good: Origen of Alexandria and John Chrysostom, Revisited
Abstract
As Elizabeth Clark has shown, early Christian theories of marriage spun around an
‘axiology of ‘difference’’ that employed sexual renunciation as its central axis.
In the gap between an idealized marriage of the soul and Christ and the actual marriages
of most believers, sexual congress emerged both as a generative metaphor and a key
validation of human-human and human-divine marriage. This essay revisits Clark’s famous
argument by reconsidering the homilies of two Greek Christian writers: Origen of Alexandria
and John Chrysostom. Origen’s imaging of marriage is first presented. He envisioned
a future ‘marriage’ between the soul and Christ, seeking release in the dissolution
of the bounded self. Marriage operates in his texts as the ideal image of human-divine
union. Actual marriage, with the necessarily involvement in conjugal activity, is
best avoided so that one’s desire can be lifted beyond the physical to the transcendent
love of Christ. His imagery centers on the male ascetic, and women can access this
divine union to the degree that they participate in these manly virtues. The essay
then turns to John Chrysostom. He also celebrated the celibate dedication to Christ
and Christ alone, but he developed a place for marriage in the path of holiness. He
thus reaffirmed the good of human marriage as beneficial even as he celebrated the
superior self-control of virgins. For Chrysostom, while the ascetic life lifts one
beyond specific social and gender concerns, those Christians who live in the world
should conform to these concerns. Thus, marriage becomes a way of living out one’s
maleness and femaleness in the proper way. The article concludes by reflecting on
how neither re-evaluation of marriage’s central meaning overturned the quotidian practices
associated with marriage as a legal instrument; marriage legislation was perceived
to be a principal duty of emperors and civic assemblies both before and after the
advent of Constantine. Chrysostom’s recalibration of the duties of marriage within
the newly Christian state preserved this dynamic while also re-emphasizing a strict,
gendered dimorphism that disallowed non-marital forms of male-female intimacy.
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Jennifer Wright Knust
Professor of Religious Studies
Jennifer Knust is a scholar of religion who specializes in early Christian history
and the religions of the ancient Mediterranean. Author of To Cast the First Stone:
The Transmission of a Gospel Story(with Tommy Wasserman, Princeton 2018), Unprotected
Texts: The Bible’s Surprising Contradictions about Sex and Desire (HarperONE 2011),
and Abandoned to Lust: Sexual Slander and Ancient Christianity (Columbia 2005), she
studies early Christian t

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