Apophatic theology and cataphatic theology both occur in the <em>corpus Johanneum</em> to describe the character of God. Apophatically the Gospel of John and the first epistle of John state that ‘nobody has ever seen God’. Cataphatically, Jesus teaches in the Gospel that, ‘Whoever has seen me has seen the Father’, and in 1 John we read that after the Parousia has taken place ‘we know that when he appears we shall be like him, for we shall see him as he is’. This article focuses on the cataphatic phrase ‘we shall see him as he is’ (1 Jn 3:2). This investigation responds to the variety of interpretations of this particular phrase, as well as to the interest in the spirituality that it could have evoked amongst the readers of thi...
The Gospel of John emphasizes both the humanity and the divinity of Jesus, simultaneously and in suc...
Christian spirituality is rooted in the Gospels. In proclaiming the truth of Resurrection and the pr...
In the Fourth Gospel, the final discourses of Jesus to the disciples comprise over four chapters (13...
The discipline, Christian Spirituality, evokes a new interest in Early Christian spirituality. What ...
The interest in this article is early Christian spirituality. The word ‘spirituality’ is used here d...
<p>This article analyses the experience of divine presence within an intimate divine-human rel...
This article probes to enlighten this old truth of the revelation and experience of God’s love in a ...
<span>The majority of early Christian documents are saturated with Jewish thought. Although Se...
The theology of Jesus as the Wisdom of God – God’s “extension of self” to human beings – which draws...
This thesis discusses the concept of "apprehension of Jesus" in the Gospel of John by focusing prima...
This article presents a literary exegetical analysis of the prologue (John 1:1-18) of the Johannine ...
This article investigates how Trinity features are presented in the Gospel of John and how the early...
This thesis establishes the value of the physical incarnation of God for belief. It asserts that the...
This article presents a literary exegetical analysis of the prologue (John 1:1-18) of the Johannine ...
Delving into the biblical aesthetic properly begins with a conception of God. The primary source for...
The Gospel of John emphasizes both the humanity and the divinity of Jesus, simultaneously and in suc...
Christian spirituality is rooted in the Gospels. In proclaiming the truth of Resurrection and the pr...
In the Fourth Gospel, the final discourses of Jesus to the disciples comprise over four chapters (13...
The discipline, Christian Spirituality, evokes a new interest in Early Christian spirituality. What ...
The interest in this article is early Christian spirituality. The word ‘spirituality’ is used here d...
<p>This article analyses the experience of divine presence within an intimate divine-human rel...
This article probes to enlighten this old truth of the revelation and experience of God’s love in a ...
<span>The majority of early Christian documents are saturated with Jewish thought. Although Se...
The theology of Jesus as the Wisdom of God – God’s “extension of self” to human beings – which draws...
This thesis discusses the concept of "apprehension of Jesus" in the Gospel of John by focusing prima...
This article presents a literary exegetical analysis of the prologue (John 1:1-18) of the Johannine ...
This article investigates how Trinity features are presented in the Gospel of John and how the early...
This thesis establishes the value of the physical incarnation of God for belief. It asserts that the...
This article presents a literary exegetical analysis of the prologue (John 1:1-18) of the Johannine ...
Delving into the biblical aesthetic properly begins with a conception of God. The primary source for...
The Gospel of John emphasizes both the humanity and the divinity of Jesus, simultaneously and in suc...
Christian spirituality is rooted in the Gospels. In proclaiming the truth of Resurrection and the pr...
In the Fourth Gospel, the final discourses of Jesus to the disciples comprise over four chapters (13...