RT Article T1 Lived Theology: Spirit, Economy, and Asceticism in Irenaeus and His Readers JF Vigiliae Christianae VO 73 IS 3 SP 297 OP 332 A1 Saieg, Paul LA English PB Brill YR 2019 UL https://ixtheo.de/Record/1685445292 AB Salvation lies at the heart of Irenaeus' thought. His two surviving works not only declare helping his readers' communities toward salvation as their purpose, but even contain prayers and meditations for the Valentinians' salvation. However, following the paradigm set down by Harnack more than a century ago, scholars have tended to separate what Irenaeus insists "rejoice together": "truth in the mind" and "holiness in the body" (Dem 3). By reconsidering the history of Irenaean scholarship on the nature of the divine economy and the infancy of Adam, I show that Adam's infancy is temporal rather than physical and that Irenaeus' interpretation of Adam's growth is at the same time the phenomenological structure of temptation, maturation, and askesis experienced by the living reader. Irenaeus' soteriology was not simply a metaphysical theory but an ascetic and even phenomenological discourse structuring a way of lifeā€”it was a lived theology. K1 Adam K1 Gospel K1 Irenaeus K1 Scripture K1 Spirit K1 Asceticism K1 Hermeneutics K1 Infant DO 10.1163/15700720-12341403