Difference between revisions of "Damianus"
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== Cyclopedia of Biblical, Theological and Ecclesiastical Literature <ref name="term_36208" /> == | == Cyclopedia of Biblical, Theological and Ecclesiastical Literature <ref name="term_36208" /> == | ||
<p> Monophysite patriarch of [[Alexandria]] (t 601), expressed himself on the doctrine of the [[Trinity]] in a sense similar to that of Sabellius. He maintained that the divinity ( | <p> Monophysite patriarch of [[Alexandria]] (t 601), expressed himself on the doctrine of the [[Trinity]] in a sense similar to that of Sabellius. He maintained that the divinity ( '''''Θεύτης''''' ) of the Father, the Son, and the [[Holy]] Ghost is an essential characteristic ( '''''Ὕπαρξις''''' ) divided among the three, so that they are God only in their unity, not each one in himself ( '''''Καθ᾿''''' '''''Ἑαυτόν''''' ), and that in this unity they constitute the one divine essence ( '''''Μίαν''''' '''''Οὐσίαν''''' '''''Καὶ''''' '''''Φύσιν''''' ). His followers were called Damianites, after him, or Angelists, from Angelium, the place where they held their assemblies in Alexandria; their adversaries were called Tetradists ( '''''Τετραδίται''''' ), as, going still further than the Tritheists, they acknowledged four gods, namely, the Father, the Son, the Holy Ghost, and the higher Being, which, in his nature ( '''''Φύσει''''' ) and in himself ( '''''Καθ᾿''''' '''''Ἑαυτόν''''' ), is God. '''''—''''' Herzog, ''Real- Encyklopadie'' , 3, 263; Mosheim, ''Ch. History'' , bk. ii, ch. vi, pt. i, '''''§''''' 4; Hagenbach, ''Hist'' . ''Of Doctrines'' , '''''§''''' 96. </p> | ||
==References == | ==References == |
Latest revision as of 10:08, 15 October 2021
A Dictionary of Early Christian Biography [1]
Damianus (2), M. [See Cosmas.]
Cyclopedia of Biblical, Theological and Ecclesiastical Literature [2]
Monophysite patriarch of Alexandria (t 601), expressed himself on the doctrine of the Trinity in a sense similar to that of Sabellius. He maintained that the divinity ( Θεύτης ) of the Father, the Son, and the Holy Ghost is an essential characteristic ( Ὕπαρξις ) divided among the three, so that they are God only in their unity, not each one in himself ( Καθ᾿ Ἑαυτόν ), and that in this unity they constitute the one divine essence ( Μίαν Οὐσίαν Καὶ Φύσιν ). His followers were called Damianites, after him, or Angelists, from Angelium, the place where they held their assemblies in Alexandria; their adversaries were called Tetradists ( Τετραδίται ), as, going still further than the Tritheists, they acknowledged four gods, namely, the Father, the Son, the Holy Ghost, and the higher Being, which, in his nature ( Φύσει ) and in himself ( Καθ᾿ Ἑαυτόν ), is God. — Herzog, Real- Encyklopadie , 3, 263; Mosheim, Ch. History , bk. ii, ch. vi, pt. i, § 4; Hagenbach, Hist . Of Doctrines , § 96.