Jeremiah Mutie is Professor of Theology and Church History at Southern California Seminary, USA. He is the author of Death in Second-Century Christian Thought: The Meaning of Death in Earliest Christianity and The Quest for Early Church Historiography: From Ferdinand C. Baur to Bart D. Ehrman and Beyond and several articles and essays on the history of Christianity. He holds ThM and PhD from Dallas Theological Seminary, USA. When he is not researching and teaching, Dr. Mutie spends his time with his family cooking and playing games.
“One of the greatest areas to explore within Christian thought and practice relates to the interaction between the physical (natural) and the metaphysical (supernatural), to what extent these properties are impacted through human activities, and what consequences may exist between this life and the life to come. In this comprehensive and well-documented work Mutie recognizes the need to explore the development of beliefs regarding these connections and provides important scholarly analysis of the historical, cultural, and theological perspectives of resulting ecclesiastical practice. I greatly appreciate Mutie’s commitment to effectively wade into these deep waters that shape religious conclusions and practices of lasting personal concern.” – Dr. Gino Pasquariello, Southern California Seminary ""In times when death seemed much nearer to daily life than today, medieval Christianity sought to answer what happens in moments before death, in death itself, and then in the afterlife. Building on his previous work Death in Second-Century Thought (2015), Dr. Jeremiah Mutie continues his tour-de-force of scholarship evaluating classical Latin with Orthodox thanatologies. Questions of theological method, sources, and doctrinal and practical development come to the fore. In so doing, Mutie informs today’s Christian understanding of death as to what might be pared away and what has enduring value."" – Dr. J. Scott Horrell, Dallas Theological Seminary ""Many of humanity’s fundamental questions revolve around death. This book is an ambitious introduction to how Christians answered those fundamental questions on death and the afterlife from the early church to the Reformation drawing on evidence from western and eastern forms of Christianity. These answers demonstrate presuppositions about some of the key beliefs in Christianity that continue to influence Christians today. Anybody who wants to understand the origins of some fundamental differences between Eastern Orthodoxy, Roman Catholicism, and Protestantism should read this book."" – Dr. Paul Smith, Grand Canyon Theological Seminary