This article describes the ontological problem of theosis or deification in terms of two dimensions: the relationship between the finite and the infinite, and the relationship between human nature and sin. Both problems are clarified through the thinking of Saint Maximus the Confessor and his distinction between logos and tropos, that is, the constitutive nature of a thing and its existential mode of being. Theosis is presented not as a transformation of the human nature, but a transformation of our mode of being by its healing and elevation by divine grace. Maximus’ theological anthropology explains how the effects of sin should not be situated at the level of human nature but its mode of being. His conceptual distinctions may help to clar...
The article looks at how the understanding of God moves from a what (being) to a who (person). This ...
This article starts to explore the problem of the mutual relations of “visible” and “what it is”. On...
The article discusses the problem of the ontological distinction between God’s transcendence and imm...
This article deals with the problem of the ontology of Jesus Christ that emerges from the pages of t...
The aim of this article is to explore the relationship between the notions of ‘logos of well-being’...
Personal ontology studies human constitution and human nature, an increasingly debated topic in Chri...
Charisms lie at the root of great spiritualities, and great spiritualities not only provide ways of ...
<p>The objective of this article is to demonstrate that the human person is an ontological greatness...
Maximus the Confessor portrays the cosmos as Christologically "prewired" for a dynamic doctrinal tra...
Giving justice to Maximus any philosophy wich does not include mysticism will be false as philosophy...
In the Centuries of Theology I.48–50, Maximus states that there are two kinds of works that belong t...
The article discusses the problem of the ontological distinction between God’s transcendence and imm...
Post-Tridentine Western Christian theology introduced the notion of natura pura, which holds that on...
St. Maximus the Confessor makes a distinction between “image” and “likeness” to God in man. The “ima...
In the article, the author shows the mystery of divinization of the man, according to Ch. Schönborn,...
The article looks at how the understanding of God moves from a what (being) to a who (person). This ...
This article starts to explore the problem of the mutual relations of “visible” and “what it is”. On...
The article discusses the problem of the ontological distinction between God’s transcendence and imm...
This article deals with the problem of the ontology of Jesus Christ that emerges from the pages of t...
The aim of this article is to explore the relationship between the notions of ‘logos of well-being’...
Personal ontology studies human constitution and human nature, an increasingly debated topic in Chri...
Charisms lie at the root of great spiritualities, and great spiritualities not only provide ways of ...
<p>The objective of this article is to demonstrate that the human person is an ontological greatness...
Maximus the Confessor portrays the cosmos as Christologically "prewired" for a dynamic doctrinal tra...
Giving justice to Maximus any philosophy wich does not include mysticism will be false as philosophy...
In the Centuries of Theology I.48–50, Maximus states that there are two kinds of works that belong t...
The article discusses the problem of the ontological distinction between God’s transcendence and imm...
Post-Tridentine Western Christian theology introduced the notion of natura pura, which holds that on...
St. Maximus the Confessor makes a distinction between “image” and “likeness” to God in man. The “ima...
In the article, the author shows the mystery of divinization of the man, according to Ch. Schönborn,...
The article looks at how the understanding of God moves from a what (being) to a who (person). This ...
This article starts to explore the problem of the mutual relations of “visible” and “what it is”. On...
The article discusses the problem of the ontological distinction between God’s transcendence and imm...