Difference between revisions of "Palingenesia"
(One intermediate revision by the same user not shown) | |||
Line 3: | Line 3: | ||
== Cyclopedia of Biblical, Theological and Ecclesiastical Literature <ref name="term_54472" /> == | == Cyclopedia of Biblical, Theological and Ecclesiastical Literature <ref name="term_54472" /> == | ||
<p> (Gr. | <p> (Gr. '''''Πάλιν''''' , ''Again,'' and '''''Γένεσις''''' [[Birth]] ) is a term that appears to have originated among .the Stoics, who employed it to denote the act of the Demiurgus, or Creator, by which, having absorbed all being into himself, he reproduced it in a new creation. The occurrence of the word in the New [[Testament]] ( Matthew 19:28, where it is used in allusion to the judgment of this world, and. the '''''Αἰῶν''''' '''''Μέλλων''''' ; and Titus 3:5, where it is used in reference to baptismal regeneration, '''''Λουτρὸν''''' '''''Παλιγγενεσαίς''''' ) has given it a place in [[Christian]] theology, and divines have variously used it to express the resurrection of men, the new birth of the individual soul, and the restoration of the world to that perfect state that it lost by the Fall the new heavens and the new earth wherein dwelleth righteousness." The term is also applied to designate both the great geological changes which the earth has undergone and the transformations in the insect kingdom, such as of caterpillars into butterflies, etc. (See [[New Birth]]); (See [[Resurrection]]). </p> | ||
== The Nuttall Encyclopedia <ref name="term_77851" /> == | == The Nuttall Encyclopedia <ref name="term_77851" /> == |
Latest revision as of 17:50, 15 October 2021
Webster's Dictionary [1]
(n.) See Palingenesis.
Cyclopedia of Biblical, Theological and Ecclesiastical Literature [2]
(Gr. Πάλιν , Again, and Γένεσις Birth ) is a term that appears to have originated among .the Stoics, who employed it to denote the act of the Demiurgus, or Creator, by which, having absorbed all being into himself, he reproduced it in a new creation. The occurrence of the word in the New Testament ( Matthew 19:28, where it is used in allusion to the judgment of this world, and. the Αἰῶν Μέλλων ; and Titus 3:5, where it is used in reference to baptismal regeneration, Λουτρὸν Παλιγγενεσαίς ) has given it a place in Christian theology, and divines have variously used it to express the resurrection of men, the new birth of the individual soul, and the restoration of the world to that perfect state that it lost by the Fall the new heavens and the new earth wherein dwelleth righteousness." The term is also applied to designate both the great geological changes which the earth has undergone and the transformations in the insect kingdom, such as of caterpillars into butterflies, etc. (See New Birth); (See Resurrection).
The Nuttall Encyclopedia [3]
Name equivalent to "new birth," and applied both to regeneration and restoration, of which baptism in the former case is the symbol; in the Stoic philosophy it is preceded by dissolution, as in the rejuvenescence process of Medea ( q. v .).