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03-15-2013, 11:49 PM | #51 |
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Yeah have you read this letter? The person who wrote this was a Christian. Do I need to fill out the objection to apply this to the person of the pagan Emperor Constantine?
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03-15-2013, 11:54 PM | #52 |
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Frank William's for one doubts that the letter was actually Constantine's http://books.google.com/books?id=tKt...pistle&f=false It's completely ludicrous to even consider for a moment that this letter was written by Constantine. It reads like a Church Father letter. But even the best incorporate its nonsense into their understanding of 'Arius' because we are so desperate for any information .
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03-16-2013, 03:28 AM | #53 | |
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a/ I think it is very difficult to make sense of the council of Nicea and the events leading up to it without a historical Arius.
b/ The historical Arius is probably almost irrelevant to events after the council of Nicea. People are called Arian by those who dislike their theology whether or not they have benn genuinely influenced by the teaching of the historical Arius. See from one of the creeds_of_antioch_341 composed by bishops suspected of "arianism". Quote:
Andrew Criddle |
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03-16-2013, 08:18 AM | #54 |
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Thank you Andrew
I am not yet at the point where I can say Arius didn't exist of course. I am just asking questions. But am I correct in assuming that the only mention of Arius in Eusebius comes in a work which is generally disputed to have been written by Eusebius (either that Eusebius did not fully write the work, that it was published after his death or written altogether by someone else)? |
03-16-2013, 08:21 AM | #55 |
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When did the theological dispute about is the son equal to the father actually start?
Did not someone here say this was not an issue at Nicea? If this is a later dispute - I thought the lovely bath reference is 380's - it looks like later disputes have been read back into thinking and actions of earlier players. I have read that Constantine and several other emperors were Arian. What else distinguished this theology, also shared by the vandals and many many others. What did it mean to be Arian? Are we looking at a far more syncretic world that was still basically Pagan to much later? Are xian claims of running stuff actually untrue? The main symbol of paganism in Rome was not destroyed until the 400's. Maybe Arius is a later invention to create some structure to the newly written xian history. |
03-17-2013, 03:54 AM | #56 | |
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What did it mean to be Arian?
Here is a letter from Arius to Bishop Alexander of Alexandria.
It seems that it is the only writing from Arius which was preserved. His other writings are known by their titles, but they have been carefully destroyed. Confession of faith from Arius and his followers to Bishop Alexander of Alexandria. Source : Wisconsin Lutheran College. Quote:
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03-17-2013, 04:08 AM | #57 |
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What did it mean to be Arian?
1. God, being the cause of all that happens, is absolutely alone without beginning.
2. The Son is neither eternal nor co-eternal nor co-unbegotten with the Father, nor does he have his being together with the Father. 3. God is before all things as monad and beginning of all. Therefore he is also before the Son. |
03-17-2013, 04:10 AM | #58 |
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I like this line wherein Presbyters are all the same to them. "Follow a presbyter" and would never capitalize that word myself.
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03-17-2013, 04:41 AM | #59 | ||
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Quote:
Quote:
And logic has it that the Son must make the Father known to keep the bastards out or the Jews would have had a father too. The Son must be both God and Lord God to them instead of the God of Isaac, Abraham and Jacob, (was it?), who all had their own idea of God, with none of them being God as Man and thus no Son for them in the image of God as God himself, from which follows that Muslims are the same to make them Jewish protestants. To wit, the Son Identifies the genus of man as God to make the Father known, and therefore the Father only 'said' and had no more to say, and just let Lord God do his thing with nothing to say in this. Note here now that essence precedes existence and so the Son must make the Father known or the Father could not Be. Just formal causation is all it is. |
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03-17-2013, 07:51 AM | #60 |
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Eusebius of Nicomedia
Eusebius of Nicomedia (died 341) was the bishop who baptised Constantine the Great in 337 just before the death of Constantine.
He was a bishop of Berytus (modern-day Beirut Lebanon) in Phoenicia, then of Nicomedia in Bithynia (now Izmit Turkey, near Istanbul), where the imperial court resided, and was finally patriarch of Constantinople from 338 up to his death. Like Arius, he was a pupil of Lucian of Antioch. He was one of Arius' most fervent supporters. It was also because of this relationship that he was the first person whom Arius contacted after the latter was excommunicated from Alexandria by Alexander.[6] Apparently, Arius and Eusebius were close enough and Eusebius powerful enough that Arius was able to put his theology down in writing. Eusebius afterwards modified his ideas somewhat, or perhaps he only yielded to the pressure of circumstances; but he was, if not the teacher, at all events the leader and organizer, of the Arian party. Eusebius of Nicomedia should not be confused with Eusebius of Caesarea, the author of the Church History. |
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