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homoiousios मीनिंग इन हिंदी
homoiousios उदाहरण वाक्य
उदाहरण वाक्य
अधिक: आगे- The semi-Arians held that the Son was " of similar substance " ( " homoiousios " ) to the Father.
- In 325, the First Council of Nicaea condemned Arianism and formulated homoiousios " ( similar in substance ), or " Anomoios " ( unsimilar ).
- The adherents of the " Homoiousios " eventually joined forces with the ( mostly Western ) adherents of the " Homoousios " and accepted the formulation of the Nicene creed.
- Semi-Arians, however, admitted that the Son was of a similar substance ( homoiousios ) as the Father but not " of the same substance " ( homoousios ) as him.
- The Acacians separated themselves from the Athanasians and Niceans, by the rejection of the word " homoousios "; from the Semi-Arians by their surrender of the homoiousios; and from the Aetians by their insistence upon the term homoios.
- Semi-Arians taught that Christ was similar ( homoios ) to the Father, or of like substance ( homoiousios ), but still subordinate " ( Pfandl, Gerhard . " The Doctrine of the Trinity Among Adventists ".
- The semi-Arians taught that the Son is of like substance with the Father ( homoiousios ) as against the outright Arians who taught that the Son was not like the Father, but had been created, and was therefore not God.
- The first group mainly opposed the Nicene terminology and preferred the term " homoiousios " ( alike in substance ) to the Nicene " homoousios ", while they rejected Arius and his teaching and accepted the equality and coeternality of the persons of the Trinity.
- The Seventh Arian Confession ( Second Sirmium Confession ) held that both " homoousios " ( of one substance ) and " homoiousios " ( of similar substance ) were unbiblical and that the Father is greater than the Son . ( This confession was later known as the Blasphemy of Sirmium)
- In contrast to the Neo-Arian belief that the Son is " anomoios ", or " unlike " the Father, and with the Semi-Arian assertion that the Son is " homoiousios ", or " like " the Father, Gregory and his fellow Cappadocians maintained the Nicaean doctrine of " theosis ", the belief that all Christians can be assimilated with God in " imitation of the incarnate Son as the divine model ."