Difference between revisions of "Anomoeans"

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== Cyclopedia of Biblical, Theological and Ecclesiastical Literature <ref name="term_20252" /> ==
== Cyclopedia of Biblical, Theological and Ecclesiastical Literature <ref name="term_20252" /> ==
<p> (ἀνόμοιος '', Dissimilar'' )'','' the name by which the stricter Arians, who denied the [[Likeness]] of the Word to the Father, were distinguished from the Semi- Arians, who merely denied his ''Consubstantiality.'' — Gieseler, ''Ch. Hist.'' 1, 198. (See Arians). </p>
<p> ( '''''Ἀνόμοιος''''' '', Dissimilar'' ) '','' the name by which the stricter Arians, who denied the [[Likeness]] of the Word to the Father, were distinguished from the Semi- Arians, who merely denied his ''Consubstantiality.'' '''''—''''' Gieseler, ''Ch. Hist.'' 1, 198. (See Arians). </p>
          
          
==References ==
==References ==

Latest revision as of 12:36, 13 October 2021

Watson's Biblical & Theological Dictionary [1]

the name by which the pure Arians were called in the fourth century, in contradistinction to the Semi-Arians. The word is formed from the Greek ανομοιος , different. For the pure Arians asserted, that the Son was of a nature different from, and in nothing like, that of the Father; whereas the Semi-Arians acknowledged a likeness of nature in the Son, at the same time that they denied, with the pure Arians, the consubstantiality of the Word. The Semi-Arians condemned the Anomoeans in the council of Selcucia; and the Anomoeans, in their turn, condemned the Semi-Arians in the councils of Constantinople and Antioch, erasing the word like out of the formula of Rimini and Constantinople.

A Dictionary of Early Christian Biography [2]

Anomoeans (from ἀνόμοιος , dissimilar ), one of the appellations of the radical Arians who, in opposition to the Athanasian or Nicene doctrine of the consubstantiality (ὁμοουσία ) and the semi-Arian view of the likeness ( ὁμοιουσία ) of the Son to the Father, taught that the Son was dissimilar, and of a different substance (ἑτεροούσιος ). [See Arianism.]

[P.S.]

Charles Buck Theological Dictionary [3]

The name by which the pure Arians were called in the fourth century, in contradistinction to the Semi- arians. The word is formed from the Greek, different.

See ARIANS and SEMI-ARIANS.

Cyclopedia of Biblical, Theological and Ecclesiastical Literature [4]

( Ἀνόμοιος , Dissimilar ) , the name by which the stricter Arians, who denied the Likeness of the Word to the Father, were distinguished from the Semi- Arians, who merely denied his Consubstantiality. Gieseler, Ch. Hist. 1, 198. (See Arians).

References