In this chapter I argue that we should take seriously the numerous vivid images of material begetting in Gregory of Nyssa’s Against Eunomius because they provide him with a more experientially based, and so intuitive, way to conceive of the hard-to-grasp idea that the first and second Person of the Trinity were both distinct entities and also unified in essence or nature. However, I shall also argue that Gregory was at the same time continuously correcting problems that an intuitive model of begetting might bring to the divine by returning to more theologically correct, reflective ways of conceiving of the divine. I shall argue that via this oscillation between intuitive ways of thinking about the divine and reflective and theological ways ...
“Christianity is a μίμησις of the divine nature.” This definition of what it means to be a Christian...
In his Third Oration on Peace Gregory of Nazianzus seeks to refute Eunomian claims that the Son and ...
Plato understood that describing God is impossible. However, according to Gregory of Nazianzus, to k...
In this chapter I argue that we should take seriously the numerous vivid images of material begettin...
This essay explores what Gregory of Nyssa is doing when he claims in Against Eunomius that his use o...
The teaching of Gregory of Nyssa on the Trinity has been explored in the light of late antique logic...
This article examines two sections of Gregory of Nyssa’s De anima et resurrectione which introduce s...
This chapter explores Gregory’s metaphysics of the Trinity, which used an innovative distinction bet...
The problem of how one knows God is central to the theological endeavor. This paper seeks to explore...
This dissertation examines Gregory of Nyssa\u27s Contra Eunomium, a fourth-century Christian theolog...
This essay demonstrates that Athenagoras’ theology is primarily concerned, not with the creative act...
grantor: University of St. Michael's CollegeChapter One deals with the status quaestionis ...
The central theme in St. Gregory of Nyssa's work "Contra Eunomium II" is whether it is possible to s...
The Church Fathers hold by and large that God created the world from nothing, by an act of will, at ...
PublishedFinal version published as chapter in Gregory of Nyssa: Contra Eunomium III. An English Tra...
“Christianity is a μίμησις of the divine nature.” This definition of what it means to be a Christian...
In his Third Oration on Peace Gregory of Nazianzus seeks to refute Eunomian claims that the Son and ...
Plato understood that describing God is impossible. However, according to Gregory of Nazianzus, to k...
In this chapter I argue that we should take seriously the numerous vivid images of material begettin...
This essay explores what Gregory of Nyssa is doing when he claims in Against Eunomius that his use o...
The teaching of Gregory of Nyssa on the Trinity has been explored in the light of late antique logic...
This article examines two sections of Gregory of Nyssa’s De anima et resurrectione which introduce s...
This chapter explores Gregory’s metaphysics of the Trinity, which used an innovative distinction bet...
The problem of how one knows God is central to the theological endeavor. This paper seeks to explore...
This dissertation examines Gregory of Nyssa\u27s Contra Eunomium, a fourth-century Christian theolog...
This essay demonstrates that Athenagoras’ theology is primarily concerned, not with the creative act...
grantor: University of St. Michael's CollegeChapter One deals with the status quaestionis ...
The central theme in St. Gregory of Nyssa's work "Contra Eunomium II" is whether it is possible to s...
The Church Fathers hold by and large that God created the world from nothing, by an act of will, at ...
PublishedFinal version published as chapter in Gregory of Nyssa: Contra Eunomium III. An English Tra...
“Christianity is a μίμησις of the divine nature.” This definition of what it means to be a Christian...
In his Third Oration on Peace Gregory of Nazianzus seeks to refute Eunomian claims that the Son and ...
Plato understood that describing God is impossible. However, according to Gregory of Nazianzus, to k...