Giovanni Stefano Menochio Explained

Honorific Prefix:Reverend
Honorific Suffix:SJ
Birth Date:9 December 1575
Birth Place:Padua, Republic of Venice
Death Place:Rome, Papal States
Nationality:Italian
Other Names:Giovanni Corona
Occupation:Catholic priest, biblical scholar, university teacher
Known For:Brevis Explicatio Sensus Literalis Sacræ Scripturæ
De republica Hebreorum
Parents:Giacomo Menochio and Margherita Menochio (née Candiani)
Alma Mater:Jesuit Brera College (Milan)
Discipline:Biblical studies, Hebrew language
Workplaces:Roman College

Giovanni Stefano Menochio (9 December 15754 February 1655) was an Italian Jesuit biblical scholar.

Life

Menochio was born at Padua, and entered the Society of Jesus on 25 May 1594. After the usual years of training and teaching the classics, he became professor of sacred scripture and then of moral theology at Milan; thereafter began his long life of superiorship. He was successively superior of Cremona, Milan, and Genoa, rector of the Roman College, provincial of the provinces of Milan and Rome, assistant of Italy, and admonitor to the Fathers-General Vincenzo Carafa and Francesco Piccolomini. He died in Rome.

Works

His first exegetical essay was a politico-Biblical study: Latin: Hieropoliticon, sive Institutiones Politicæ e Sacris Scripturis depromptæ, 956 pages (Lyon, 1625). This book on theocratic politics was dedicated to Cardinal Alessandro Orsini. A second edition (Cologne, 1626) was dedicated to Ferdinand III. The Jesuit poet Sarbiewski made this study the subject of an ode (see "Lyrica", II, n. 18).

The next year there appeared an economic study of the Bible: Latin: Institutiones Œconomicæ ex Sacris Litteris depromptæ, 543 pages (Lyon, 1627). The author translated into Italian these lessons on the care of one's own household; this translation was a posthumous publication: Latin: Economia Christiana, 542 pages (Venice, 1656).

His magnum opus was Latin: Brevis Explicatio Sensus Literalis Sacræ Scripturæ optimus quibusque Auctoribus per Epitomen Collecta, 3 vols., 115 pages, 449, 549+29 (Cologne, 1630). Many other editions of this commentary have been published in many lands: Cologne, 1659; Antwerp, 1679; Lyons, 1683, 1697, 1703; the revised edition of René-Joseph Tournemine, published at Paris, 1719, 1721, 1731; Avignon, 1768; Ghent, 1829; the enlarged and revised edition of Francesco Antonio Zaccaria, published at Venice, 1743, 1755, 1761.

The Latin: [[scholia]] of Menochio are introduced into the Latin: Biblia Magna and the Latin: Biblia Maxima of Jean de La Haye; the Latin: Biblia Sacra of Lucas Brugensis; the Latin: Cursus Scripturæ Sacræ of Migne; fourteen editions of the French: Sainte Bible of Louis de Carrières; and French: La Sainte Bible of Claude-Joseph Drioux (Paris, 1873).

A later critic, Simon, though not at all in sympathy with Menochio's orthodoxy, says French: "C'est un des plus judicieux scoliates que nous ayons tant sur le Vieux que sur le Nouveau Testament" (Hist. Crit. du N. T., xliv). Reusch (German: Kirchenlexikon) prefers the notes of Menochio to those of Manuel de Sá and Mariana.

This commentator sought to find the literal meaning of the Bible and the Church Fathers. Menochio studied the text in its original, and brought to bear upon that study knowledge of Jewish antiquities.

Main works

See also

References