Difference between revisions of "Arianism"
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| + | ''In brief'': Arianism was a Christological heresy held by followers of Arius in the early Christian Church, claiming that Jesus Christ and God the Father were not always contemporary, seeing the Son as a divine being, created by the Father. The First Council of Nicaea (325 A.D.) condemned Arianism. | ||
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'''Overviews / explanations''' | '''Overviews / explanations''' | ||
| + | * [[About Arianism]] | ||
* [[Arianism (wikipedia)]] | * [[Arianism (wikipedia)]] | ||
* [[Arius (wikipedia)]] | * [[Arius (wikipedia)]] | ||
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* [[Famous quotes about Arianism]] | * [[Famous quotes about Arianism]] | ||
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| + | '''See also''' | ||
| + | * [[Arius]] | ||
Revision as of 06:04, 15 October 2005
In brief: Arianism was a Christological heresy held by followers of Arius in the early Christian Church, claiming that Jesus Christ and God the Father were not always contemporary, seeing the Son as a divine being, created by the Father. The First Council of Nicaea (325 A.D.) condemned Arianism.
Overviews / explanations
Articles / opinions
Quotes
See also