It is important work that merits attention since its main trajectory is theological and contextual... The study id therefore a welcome addition to the study of sexuality and asceticism in late antiquity.
Chris de Wet, Studia Historiae Ecclesiasticae
Hunter's excellent book will doubtless remain a standard work for years to come; although the topic is specialized, Hunter's fine style makes the book accessible to a wider audience than scholars of late ancient Christianity.
Elizabeth A. Clark, Journal of Early Christian Studies
In the end it is impossible not to be convinced by Hunter's central contention, that Jovinian is to be understood not as a 'laxist' advocate of unrestrained immortality but as a sincere and serious thinker. These same questions would be asked and answered again, from Pelagius to Martin Luther and beyond; and Hunter is right to restore them to a central place in the history of Christian ideas.
Michael Stuart Williams, Journal of Ecclesiastical History
A wonderful example of what the best scholarship in late antique Christianity ought to look like.
Shawn W. J. Keough, Bryn Mawr Classical Review
Hunter's work is impressive... it takes on some of the most contentious doctrinal issues from the early Christian period and clearly shows a church in formative mode.
Aideen Hartney, Journal of Theological Studies