Talk:Arius: Difference between revisions
Notification of altered sources needing review #IABot (v1.4) |
Overthrows (talk | contribs) bringing down the grade, things are all over the place |
||
(24 intermediate revisions by 11 users not shown) | |||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
{{WikiProject banner shell|class=C|vital=yes|living=no|listas=Arius|1= |
|||
{{Vital article|level=4|topic=People|class=B}} |
|||
{{WikiProject Biography}} |
|||
{{WikiProjectBannerShell|1= |
|||
{{WikiProject |
{{WikiProject Berbers|importance=}} |
||
{{WikiProject |
{{WikiProject Christianity|importance=High}} |
||
{{WikiProject |
{{WikiProject Philosophy|importance=Low|ancient=yes|philosopher=yes}} |
||
{{WikiProject |
{{WikiProject Classical Greece and Rome|importance=mid}} |
||
{{WikiProject Philosophy|importance=mid|class=B|ancient=yes|philosopher=yes}} |
|||
{{WikiProject Classical Greece and Rome|class=B|importance=mid}} |
|||
}} |
}} |
||
{{User:MiszaBot/config |
{{User:MiszaBot/config |
||
Line 17: | Line 15: | ||
|archive = Talk:Arius/Archive %(counter)d |
|archive = Talk:Arius/Archive %(counter)d |
||
}} |
}} |
||
{{archive box|auto=yes |search=yes |bot= |
{{archive box|auto=yes |search=yes |bot=Lowercase sigmabot III |age=3 |units=months |index=/Archive index }} |
||
{{User:HBC Archive Indexerbot/OptIn |
{{User:HBC Archive Indexerbot/OptIn |
||
|target=/Archive index |mask=/Archive <#> |leading_zeros=0 |indexhere=yes |
|target=/Archive index |mask=/Archive <#> |leading_zeros=0 |indexhere=yes |
||
}} |
}} |
||
== Constantine Baptism == |
|||
== Where to put Thalia quotes and extracts == |
|||
"Historians report that Constantine, who had never been baptized as a Christian during his lifetime, was baptized on his deathbed by the Arian bishop, Eusebius of Nicomedia." |
|||
Hi, |
|||
I just did a rearrangement of sections without deleting any content. The extended quotes of translations of the Thalia were under "Arius' Doctrine," which should instead be reserved for summaries of what Arius believed. Then there was another section called "Extant writings," and there was a paragraph on the Thalia, but the quotes from the Thalia were not there. So I moved the whole section on the Thalia to "Extant Writings," putting the old paragraph from Extant Writings on the Thalia at the top of this new section. There may now be some duplication requiring style editing. This should create the appropriate space for further quotes and translations from the Thalia.[[User:Jroo222|Jroo222]] ([[User talk:Jroo222|talk]]) 18:08, 15 August 2016 (UTC) |
|||
That would mean it ''was'' during his lifetime, no? ( [[User:SailingOn|SailingOn]] ([[User talk:SailingOn|talk]]) 19:27, 3 December 2017 (UTC) ) |
|||
I have added a long quote from the Thalia in ancient Greek, copied from Hans-Georg Opitz' edition, which is now available online. I inserted the translation by Aaron West, currently online. Since the quotes that were already on the page were also directly from West's translation, I deleted these to avoid duplication, but I retained the previous editor's comments on the content of the Thalia in a fused sentence. The only information I deleted was the previous editor's introduction to the quotes, which stated that the citations came from the Discourses Against Arians; the quotes in fact come from De Synodis. I also fused the introductions into one and eliminated duplicate statements, for example folding all glosses of the word Thalia into one parenthesis. |
|||
:It would mean towards or at the end of his life. [[User:Tgeorgescu|Tgeorgescu]] ([[User talk:Tgeorgescu|talk]]) 22:28, 3 December 2017 (UTC) |
|||
I am carefully copyediting my Ancient Greek and making sure the English glosses are beneath the correct corresponding lines. Apologies for any errors that may have crept in, I will attempt to double-check from time to time and try to be as accurate as possible. Original sources (Opitz, West) are online. [[User:Jroo222|Jroo222]] ([[User talk:Jroo222|talk]]) 21:40, 16 August 2016 (UTC) |
|||
:Good job! [[Special:Contributions/97.95.125.122|97.95.125.122]] ([[User talk:97.95.125.122|talk]]) 01:22, 18 August 2016 (UTC) |
|||
::Thank you. Appreciate the encouragement. [[User:Jroo222|Jroo222]] ([[User talk:Jroo222|talk]]) 21:13, 18 August 2016 (UTC) |
|||
::That's what they intend it to mean, but that's not what lifetime means. I'm changing the sentence, Oxford dictionary states lifetime means "The duration of a person's life." I refuse to submit to bizarro English.( [[User:SailingOn|SailingOn]] ([[User talk:SailingOn|talk]]) 02:18, 4 December 2017 (UTC) ) |
|||
ΟΚ. Ι just finished copyediting the ancient Greek, taken from the Opitz edition available at present through the Internet Archive. The first time I typed it in I was a bit hasty and there were errors on every line, mixed up lines, mismatched Greek and English lines, missing lines, every error imaginable. I think it is fixed up now; as far as I can tell the Ancient Greek of the extract of the Thalia from Athanasius' De Synodis is exactly as it is in Opitz' edition down to the accents.[[User:Jroo222|Jroo222]] ([[User talk:Jroo222|talk]]) 21:49, 17 August 2016 (UTC) |
|||
:You did a good job in this article :)--[[User:Anẓar|Anẓar]] ([[User talk:Anẓar|talk]]) 02:07, 21 August 2016 (UTC) |
|||
::Edit just noticed you fixed it. <!-- Template:Unsigned --><small class="autosigned">— Preceding [[Wikipedia:Signatures|unsigned]] comment added by [[User:SailingOn|SailingOn]] ([[User talk:SailingOn#top|talk]] • [[Special:Contributions/SailingOn|contribs]]) 02:19, 4 December 2017 (UTC)</small> <!--Autosigned by SineBot--> |
|||
== External links modified == |
|||
== Ehrman == |
|||
Hello fellow Wikipedians, |
|||
{{quote|52:07 |
|||
I have just modified {{plural:3|one external link|3 external links}} on [[Arius]]. Please take a moment to review [https://en.wikipedia.org/enwiki/w/index.php?diff=prev&oldid=744863403 my edit]. If you have any questions, or need the bot to ignore the links, or the page altogether, please visit [[User:Cyberpower678/FaQs#InternetArchiveBot|this simple FaQ]] for additional information. I made the following changes: |
|||
arias arias was trying to figure out how |
|||
*Added archive https://web.archive.org/web/20110819215807/http://www.fourthcentury.com:80/index.php/urkunde-33 to http://www.fourthcentury.com/index.php/urkunde-33 |
|||
52:12 |
|||
*Added archive https://web.archive.org/web/20080304012953/http://www.fourthcentury.com:80/Arius/ariusintro.htm to http://www.fourthcentury.com/arius/ariusintro.htm |
|||
to explain the relationship of God the |
|||
*Added archive https://web.archive.org/web/20080925170957/http://www.fourthcentury.com:80/index.php/arius-chart to http://www.fourthcentury.com/index.php/arius-chart |
|||
52:15 |
|||
Father and God the Son at this point in |
|||
52:18 |
|||
Christian history every Christian knew |
|||
52:21 |
|||
that Jesus was the son of God this is |
|||
52:23 |
|||
not a decision that was being made |
|||
52:24 |
|||
Christians had thought this for |
|||
52:26 |
|||
centuries at this point |
|||
52:27 |
|||
ever since the New Testament everybody |
|||
52:29 |
|||
thought Jesus was the son of God the |
|||
52:31 |
|||
question is if Jesus is the Son of God |
|||
52:34 |
|||
how does he relate to God the Father |
|||
52:36 |
|||
he's obviously a son but but in what |
|||
52:39 |
|||
sense is he also God in what sense is he |
|||
52:44 |
|||
also God everybody thought he was God |
|||
52:45 |
|||
but in what sense is he God arias |
|||
52:49 |
|||
solution was this arias said that in |
|||
52:52 |
|||
eternity past way back in eternity |
|||
52:55 |
|||
before anything else existed just God |
|||
52:57 |
|||
existed and God brought into being his |
|||
53:01 |
|||
son he begot a son Christ came into |
|||
53:04 |
|||
existence Christ was a secondary |
|||
53:08 |
|||
divinity a subordinate divinity not |
|||
53:12 |
|||
equal in power and glory and Majesty to |
|||
53:14 |
|||
the Father because he's the son he's not |
|||
53:16 |
|||
the father the father is superior to the |
|||
53:19 |
|||
son Christ the son then created the |
|||
53:24 |
|||
universe and he eventually came into the |
|||
53:27 |
|||
world as a human being and died for the |
|||
53:29 |
|||
sins of the world was raised from the |
|||
53:30 |
|||
dead or returned to heaven and is God |
|||
53:33 |
|||
but he's a subordinate |
|||
53:35 |
|||
divinity who came into being at a |
|||
53:37 |
|||
certain point of time well that made |
|||
53:40 |
|||
sense to a lot of people and still |
|||
53:42 |
|||
probably make sense to a lot of people |
|||
53:43 |
|||
because I mean what's the option I mean |
|||
53:47 |
|||
if if he's totally equal with God then |
|||
53:50 |
|||
that would mean that he can't be |
|||
53:52 |
|||
Almighty because God would be Almighty |
|||
53:55 |
|||
but if God's Almighty and he's Almighty |
|||
53:57 |
|||
how's that work you can't have to all my |
|||
53:59 |
|||
T's if two people are Almighty neither |
|||
54:01 |
|||
one of them is all-mighty right so it |
|||
54:05 |
|||
doesn't|Bart Ehrman|Smithsonian Part Four - Constantine and the Christian Faith}} |
|||
{{youtube|xohkrxWCHyE|Smithsonian Part Four - Constantine and the Christian Faith}} [[User:Tgeorgescu|Tgeorgescu]] ([[User talk:Tgeorgescu|talk]]) 00:36, 15 October 2019 (UTC) |
|||
When you have finished reviewing my changes, please set the ''checked'' parameter below to '''true''' or '''failed''' to let others know (documentation at {{tlx|Sourcecheck}}). |
|||
== Does not follow Wikipedia writing style == |
|||
{{sourcecheck|checked=false}} |
|||
This reads like a news article, not an encyclopedic entry [[User:SirColdcrown|a Rookie editor of This Emporium of Knowledge, SirColdcrown]] ([[User talk:SirColdcrown|talk]]) 00:12, 3 November 2023 (UTC) |
|||
Cheers.—[[User:InternetArchiveBot|'''<span style="color:darkgrey;font-family:monospace">InternetArchiveBot</span>''']] <span style="color:green;font-family:Rockwell">([[User talk:InternetArchiveBot|Report bug]])</span> 22:02, 17 October 2016 (UTC) |
|||
== (Re)moved three sections to here == |
|||
Good morning all, |
|||
== English language change in "The First Council of Nicaea" == |
|||
It seems that one user, [[User:AndriesvN|AndriesvN]], added three sections to the start of this page over the summer. All three come off as partisan and polemical, not fitting with the tone or scope of wikipedia. There is a lot of good, nuanced information in those sections, but it is presented unprofessionally, so I've moved it to here until [[User:AndriesvN|AndriesvN]] or another user can add the information back in in a more polished, less polemical way. |
|||
I did 1 change in section "The First Council of Nicaea", 3rd paragraph: "But Athanasius is seen as doing the legwork and concluded [...] that the Son was of the same essence (homoousios) THAN the Father" to "But Athanasius is seen as doing the legwork and concluded [...] that the Son was of the same essence (homoousios) AS the Father", as "of the same essence than" was a strange English formulation. That strange formula containing "of the same essence than" also appears in the referenced work: Matt Perry - Athanasius and his Influence at the Council of Nicaea - QUODLIBET JOURNAL. |
|||
--[[User:MarkusAureliusMarcoMark|MarkusAureliusMarcoMark]] ([[User talk:MarkusAureliusMarcoMark|talk]]) 15:14, 16 November 2023 (UTC) |
|||
Now English is not my first language, so I am not aware of all the implications of the formula "of the same essence than", as compared to "of the same essence as". Maybe the former one has some meaning. Maybe someone who is proficient and knowledgeable in the English language may give more information here. [[User:Ferred|Ferred]] ([[User talk:Ferred|talk]]) 17:13, 6 November 2016 (UTC) |
|||
I changed it again to "that the Son was of the same essence (homoousios) WITH the Father". This is motivated by the fact that the formula "with the Father" seems to be preferred in many texts; firstly in the [[Nicene Creed]], also in the article on [[Homoousion]], but also in Athanasius, Discourse 1 Against the Arians, part 9, http://www.newadvent.org/fathers/28161.htm : "Very Son of the Father, natural and genuine, proper to His essence, Wisdom Only-begotten, and Very and Only Word of God is He; not a creature or work, but an offspring proper to the Father's essence. '''Wherefore He is very God, existing one in essence with the very Father'''". This formula may carry a significant meaning. |
|||
A quote from the original source would be better. Does the Athanasian Trinitarian defense refer to Athanasius' "De Decretis"? This is not clear. [[User:Ferred|Ferred]] ([[User talk:Ferred|talk]]) 23:47, 6 November 2016 (UTC) |
|||
Was Arius the "founder" of Arianism? |
|||
In the textbook account of the 'Arian' Controversy, Arius was "the founder of [[Arianism]]."{{sfn|Anatolios|2011|p=44}} However, "in the first few decades of the present (20<sup>th</sup>) century … seminally important work was … done in the sorting-out of the chronology of the controversy, and in the isolation of a hard core of reliable primary documents."{{sfn|Williams|2002|pp=11–12}} Consequently, "the four decades since 1960 have produced much revisionary scholarship on the Trinitarian and Christological disputes of the fourth century."{{sfn|Ayres|2004|p=11}} With respect to Arius, that scholarship now concludes:<blockquote>"We are not to think of Arius as dominating and directing a single school of thought to which all his allies belonged."{{sfn|Williams|2002|p=171}} |
|||
"Arius' role in 'Arianism' was ''not that of the founder'' of a sect. It was not his individual teaching that dominated the mid-century eastern Church."{{sfn|Williams|2002|p=165}} |
|||
Further quotes from Athanasius, De Decretis, http://www.newadvent.org/fathers/2809.htm : |
|||
"Arius evidently made converts to his views … but he left ''no school of disciples''."{{sfn|Williams|2002|p=233}}</blockquote>The Son's precise relationship with the Father had been discussed for decades before Arius's advent. Arius' dispute with his bishop intensified the controversy:<blockquote>"The views of Arius were such as … to bring into unavoidable prominence a doctrinal crisis which had gradually been gathering. … He was the spark that started the explosion. But ''in himself he was of no great significance''."{{sfn|Hanson|1988|p=xvii}}</blockquote>After the Nicene Council, [https://revelationbyjesuschrist.com/little-writings/#two Arius and his theology were irrelevant]:<blockquote>"Arius' own theology is of little importance in understanding the major debates of the rest of the century."{{sfn|Ayres|2004|pp=56–57}}</blockquote>Others like [[Eusebius|Eusebius of Caesarea]] and [[Eusebius of Nicomedia]] proved much more influential in the long run. In fact, some later Arians disavowed the name, claiming not to have been familiar with the man or his specific teachings.{{sfn|Hanson|2007|pp=127–128}}<ref name=":0">{{cite journal|last=Kopeck|first=M R|title=Neo Arian Religion: Evidence of the Apostolic Constitutions|journal=Arianism: Historical and Theological Reassessments|year=1985|pages=160–162}}</ref><blockquote>"Those who suspected or openly repudiated the decisions of Nicaea … certainly (did not have) a loyalty to the teaching of Arius as an individual theologian." "Arius was suspect in the eyes of the Lucianists and their neo-Arian successors."{{sfn|Williams|2002|pp=233–234}}</blockquote> |
|||
part 19: "For neither are other things as the Son, nor is the Word one among others, for He is Lord and Framer of all; and on this account did the Holy Council declare expressly that He was of the essence of the Father, that we might believe the Word to be other than the nature of things originate, being alone truly from God" |
|||
part 20: "But the Bishops [...] were again compelled on their part to collect the sense of the Scriptures, and to re-say and re-write what they had said before, more distinctly still, namely, that the Son is 'one in essence ' with the Father: by way of signifying, that the Son was from the Father, and not merely like, but the same in likeness , and of showing that the Son's likeness and unalterableness was different from such copy of the same as is ascribed to us, which we acquire from virtue on the ground of observance of the commandments. For bodies which are like each other may be separated and become at distances from each other, as are human sons relatively to their parents (as it is written concerning Adam and Seth, who was begotten of him that he was like him after his own pattern Genesis 5:3); but since the generation of the Son from the Father is not according to the nature of men, and not only like, but also inseparable from the essence of the Father, and He and the Father are one, as He has said Himself, and the Word is ever in the Father and the Father in the Word, as the radiance stands towards the light (for this the phrase itself indicates), therefore the Council, as understanding this, suitably wrote 'one in essence,' that they might both defeat the perverseness of the heretics, and show that the Word was other than originated things. " |
|||
Why is the controversy named after Arius? |
|||
part 30: "the Word is the Father's Image, and one in essence with Him" [[User:Ferred|Ferred]] ([[User talk:Ferred|talk]]) 00:37, 7 November 2016 (UTC) |
|||
If Arius was of no great significance, as stated above, why is the controversy named after him? Some argue that, because the conflict between Arius and his foes brought the issue to the theological forefront, the doctrine they said he proclaimed—though he had definitely not originated—is generally labeled as "his". But scholars now conclude as follows: |
|||
* "The textbook picture of an Arian system … ''inspired by the teachings of the Alexandrian presbyter'', is the invention of Athanasius' polemic."{{sfn|Williams|2002|p=234}} |
|||
In the phrase "[the Son was of the same essence (homoousios) with the Father, and] was eternally generated from that essence of the Father" the meaning of the word "eternally" is not very clear. [[User:Ferred|Ferred]] ([[User talk:Ferred|talk]]) 00:57, 7 November 2016 (UTC) |
|||
* "'Arianism' is the polemical creation of ''Athanasius'' above all."{{sfn|Williams|2002|p=247}} |
|||
* "'Arianism' as a coherent system, founded by a single great figure and sustained by his disciples, is a fantasy … based on the polemic of Nicene writers, above all ''Athanasius''."{{sfn|Williams|2002|p=82}} |
|||
Athanasius' purpose was to create the impression that, although the various anti-Nicene views seem to differ, they all constituted a single coherent system; all based on Arius' teachings. For example: |
|||
== Relationship with related articles == |
|||
* "Athanasius' controversial energies … are dedicated to building up the picture of his enemies as ''uniformly committed … to a specific set of doctrines advanced by Arius'' and a small group of confederates."{{sfn|Williams|2002|pp=82–83}} |
|||
For a discussion of this subject please see the page [[Talk:Arian controversy#Arian controversy and related articles]] — Jpacobb (talk) 01:05, 1 February 2017 (UTC) |
|||
* "The professed purpose of Athanasius … is to exhibit the essential continuity of Arianism from first to last beneath a deceptive appearance of variety, all non-Nicene formularies of belief really lead back to the naked 'blasphemies of Arius'."{{sfn|Williams|2002|p=66}} |
|||
* "Athanasius ... was determined to show that any proposed alternative to the Nicene formula collapsed back into some version of Arius' teaching, with all the incoherence and inadequacy that teaching displayed."{{sfn|Williams|2002|p=247}} |
|||
Athanasius' purpose, therefore, was to argue, since Arius' theology was already formally rejected by the church, that all opposition to the Nicene Creed was also already rejected. However: |
|||
== External links modified == |
|||
* "'Arianism,' throughout most of the fourth century, was in fact a loose and uneasy coalition of those hostile to Nicaea in general and the ''homoousios'' in particular."{{sfn|Williams|2002|p=166}} |
|||
Hello fellow Wikipedians, |
|||
* "Scholars continue to talk as if there were a clear continuity among non-Nicene theologians by deploying such labels as Arians, semi-Arians, and neo-Arians. Such presentations are misleading."{{sfn|Ayres|2004|pp=13–14}} |
|||
* "There was no such thing in the fourth century as a single, coherent 'Arian' party."{{sfn|Williams|2002|p=233}} |
|||
For that reason: |
|||
I have just modified 6 external links on [[Arius]]. Please take a moment to review [https://en.wikipedia.org/enwiki/w/index.php?diff=prev&oldid=789708727 my edit]. If you have any questions, or need the bot to ignore the links, or the page altogether, please visit [[User:Cyberpower678/FaQs#InternetArchiveBot|this simple FaQ]] for additional information. I made the following changes: |
|||
*Corrected formatting/usage for http://www.fourthcentury.com/index.php/urkunde-33 |
|||
*Added archive https://web.archive.org/web/20120301105222/http://www.libertypages.com/clark/10695.html to http://www.libertypages.com/clark/10695.html |
|||
*Added archive https://web.archive.org/web/20120428043554/http://fourthcentury.com/index.php/arius-thalia-intro to http://www.fourthcentury.com/index.php/arius-thalia-intro/ |
|||
*Added archive https://web.archive.org/web/20120428043554/http://fourthcentury.com/index.php/arius-thalia-intro to http://www.fourthcentury.com/index.php/arius-thalia-intro/ |
|||
*Added archive https://web.archive.org/web/20080304012953/http://www.fourthcentury.com/Arius/ariusintro.htm to http://www.fourthcentury.com/arius/ariusintro.htm |
|||
*Corrected formatting/usage for http://www.fourthcentury.com/index.php/arius-chart |
|||
* "The expression 'the Arian Controversy' is ''a serious misnomer.''"{{sfn|Hanson|1988|pp=xvii–xviii}} |
|||
When you have finished reviewing my changes, you may follow the instructions on the template below to fix any issues with the URLs. |
|||
* "'Arianism' is ''a very unhelpful term'' to use in relation to fourth-century controversy."{{sfn|Williams|2002|p=247}} |
|||
* "This controversy is mistakenly called Arian."{{sfn|Ayres|2004|p=13}} |
|||
Arius' writings |
|||
{{sourcecheck|checked=false|needhelp=}} |
|||
Very little of Arius' writing has survived. "As far as his own writings go, we have no more than three letters, (and) a few fragments of another." The three are: |
|||
# The confession of faith Arius presented to Alexander of Alexandria, |
|||
Cheers.—[[User:InternetArchiveBot|'''<span style="color:darkgrey;font-family:monospace">InternetArchiveBot</span>''']] <span style="color:green;font-family:Rockwell">([[User talk:InternetArchiveBot|Report bug]])</span> 02:19, 9 July 2017 (UTC) |
|||
# His letter to Eusebius of Nicomedia, and |
|||
# The confession he submitted to the emperor.{{sfnm|Hanson|1988|1pp=5–6|Williams|2002|2p=95}} |
|||
"The Thalia is Arius' only known theological work"{{sfn|Hanson|1988|p=10}} but "we do not possess a single complete and continuous text."{{sfn|Williams|2002|p=62}} We only have extracts from it in the writings of Arius' enemies, "mostly from the pen of Athanasius of Alexandria, his bitterest and most prejudiced enemy."{{sfn|Hanson|1988|p=6}} |
|||
Emperor Constantine ordered their burning while Arius was still living. Some recent scholars have concluded that so little survived because "the people of his day, whether they agreed with him or not, did not regard him (Arius) as a particularly significant writer".{{sfn|Hanson|1988|pp=xvii–xviii}} |
|||
Those works which have survived are quoted in the works of churchmen who denounced him as a [[heresy|heretic]]. This leads some—but not all—scholars to question their reliability.<ref>{{cite web |last=Dennison |first=James T Jr |title=Arius ''"Orthodoxos"''; Athanasius ''"Politicus"'': The Rehabilitation of Arius and the Denigration of Athanasius |url=http://www.kerux.com/documents/keruxv17n2a5.htm |access-date=2 May 2012 |publisher=Northwest Theological Seminary |location=Lynnwood}}</ref> For example [[Richard Hanson (bishop)|Bishop R.P.C. Hanson]] wrote:<blockquote>"Athanasius, a fierce opponent of Arius … certainly would not have stopped short of ''misrepresenting'' what he said."{{sfn|Hanson|1988|p=10}} |
|||
"Athanasius... may be suspected of pressing the words ''maliciously'' rather further than Arius intended."{{sfn|Hanson|1988|p=15}}</blockquote>[[Rowan Williams|Archbishop Rowan Williams]] agrees that Athanasius applied "''unscrupulous'' tactics in polemic and struggle".{{sfn|Williams|2002|p=239}} [[User:MarkusAureliusMarcoMark|MarkusAureliusMarcoMark]] ([[User talk:MarkusAureliusMarcoMark|talk]]) 15:14, 16 November 2023 (UTC) |
|||
:{{re|MarkusAureliusMarcoMark}} Yeah, whatever. Since you removed the quotes, please write some coherent prose based upon those [[WP:RS]]. [[User:tgeorgescu|tgeorgescu]] ([[User talk:tgeorgescu|talk]]) 15:20, 16 November 2023 (UTC) |
|||
::Hey! I don't have the time right now to re-insert all of these in their relevant spots on the article, but I figured this might be a good opportunity for the original editor to prove themselves and re-insert things in a more nuanced way. I looked through their contributions and they seem to be pretty uniformly making wikipedia a worse place by confusing terms and adding in block quotes from scholars rather than keeping with the spirit of Wikipedia in tone or content. --[[User:MarkusAureliusMarcoMark|MarkusAureliusMarcoMark]] ([[User talk:MarkusAureliusMarcoMark|talk]]) 15:27, 16 November 2023 (UTC) |
|||
{{reflist talk}} |
Latest revision as of 21:12, 16 May 2024
This level-4 vital article is rated C-class on Wikipedia's content assessment scale. It is of interest to the following WikiProjects: | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
This page has archives. Sections older than 90 days may be automatically archived by Lowercase sigmabot III when more than 4 sections are present. |
Constantine Baptism
[edit]"Historians report that Constantine, who had never been baptized as a Christian during his lifetime, was baptized on his deathbed by the Arian bishop, Eusebius of Nicomedia."
That would mean it was during his lifetime, no? ( SailingOn (talk) 19:27, 3 December 2017 (UTC) )
- It would mean towards or at the end of his life. Tgeorgescu (talk) 22:28, 3 December 2017 (UTC)
- That's what they intend it to mean, but that's not what lifetime means. I'm changing the sentence, Oxford dictionary states lifetime means "The duration of a person's life." I refuse to submit to bizarro English.( SailingOn (talk) 02:18, 4 December 2017 (UTC) )
- Edit just noticed you fixed it. — Preceding unsigned comment added by SailingOn (talk • contribs) 02:19, 4 December 2017 (UTC)
Ehrman
[edit]52:07
arias arias was trying to figure out how 52:12 to explain the relationship of God the 52:15 Father and God the Son at this point in 52:18 Christian history every Christian knew 52:21 that Jesus was the son of God this is 52:23 not a decision that was being made 52:24 Christians had thought this for 52:26 centuries at this point 52:27 ever since the New Testament everybody 52:29 thought Jesus was the son of God the 52:31 question is if Jesus is the Son of God 52:34 how does he relate to God the Father 52:36 he's obviously a son but but in what 52:39 sense is he also God in what sense is he 52:44 also God everybody thought he was God 52:45 but in what sense is he God arias 52:49 solution was this arias said that in 52:52 eternity past way back in eternity 52:55 before anything else existed just God 52:57 existed and God brought into being his 53:01 son he begot a son Christ came into 53:04 existence Christ was a secondary 53:08 divinity a subordinate divinity not 53:12 equal in power and glory and Majesty to 53:14 the Father because he's the son he's not 53:16 the father the father is superior to the 53:19 son Christ the son then created the 53:24 universe and he eventually came into the 53:27 world as a human being and died for the 53:29 sins of the world was raised from the 53:30 dead or returned to heaven and is God 53:33 but he's a subordinate 53:35 divinity who came into being at a 53:37 certain point of time well that made 53:40 sense to a lot of people and still 53:42 probably make sense to a lot of people 53:43 because I mean what's the option I mean 53:47 if if he's totally equal with God then 53:50 that would mean that he can't be 53:52 Almighty because God would be Almighty 53:55 but if God's Almighty and he's Almighty 53:57 how's that work you can't have to all my 53:59 T's if two people are Almighty neither 54:01 one of them is all-mighty right so it 54:05
doesn't
— Bart Ehrman, Smithsonian Part Four - Constantine and the Christian Faith
Smithsonian Part Four - Constantine and the Christian Faith on YouTube Tgeorgescu (talk) 00:36, 15 October 2019 (UTC)
Does not follow Wikipedia writing style
[edit]This reads like a news article, not an encyclopedic entry a Rookie editor of This Emporium of Knowledge, SirColdcrown (talk) 00:12, 3 November 2023 (UTC)
(Re)moved three sections to here
[edit]Good morning all,
It seems that one user, AndriesvN, added three sections to the start of this page over the summer. All three come off as partisan and polemical, not fitting with the tone or scope of wikipedia. There is a lot of good, nuanced information in those sections, but it is presented unprofessionally, so I've moved it to here until AndriesvN or another user can add the information back in in a more polished, less polemical way.
--MarkusAureliusMarcoMark (talk) 15:14, 16 November 2023 (UTC)
Was Arius the "founder" of Arianism?
In the textbook account of the 'Arian' Controversy, Arius was "the founder of Arianism."[1] However, "in the first few decades of the present (20th) century … seminally important work was … done in the sorting-out of the chronology of the controversy, and in the isolation of a hard core of reliable primary documents."[2] Consequently, "the four decades since 1960 have produced much revisionary scholarship on the Trinitarian and Christological disputes of the fourth century."[3] With respect to Arius, that scholarship now concludes:
"We are not to think of Arius as dominating and directing a single school of thought to which all his allies belonged."[4]
"Arius' role in 'Arianism' was not that of the founder of a sect. It was not his individual teaching that dominated the mid-century eastern Church."[5]
"Arius evidently made converts to his views … but he left no school of disciples."[6]
The Son's precise relationship with the Father had been discussed for decades before Arius's advent. Arius' dispute with his bishop intensified the controversy:
"The views of Arius were such as … to bring into unavoidable prominence a doctrinal crisis which had gradually been gathering. … He was the spark that started the explosion. But in himself he was of no great significance."[7]
After the Nicene Council, Arius and his theology were irrelevant:
"Arius' own theology is of little importance in understanding the major debates of the rest of the century."[8]
Others like Eusebius of Caesarea and Eusebius of Nicomedia proved much more influential in the long run. In fact, some later Arians disavowed the name, claiming not to have been familiar with the man or his specific teachings.[9][10]
"Those who suspected or openly repudiated the decisions of Nicaea … certainly (did not have) a loyalty to the teaching of Arius as an individual theologian." "Arius was suspect in the eyes of the Lucianists and their neo-Arian successors."[11]
Why is the controversy named after Arius?
If Arius was of no great significance, as stated above, why is the controversy named after him? Some argue that, because the conflict between Arius and his foes brought the issue to the theological forefront, the doctrine they said he proclaimed—though he had definitely not originated—is generally labeled as "his". But scholars now conclude as follows:
- "The textbook picture of an Arian system … inspired by the teachings of the Alexandrian presbyter, is the invention of Athanasius' polemic."[12]
- "'Arianism' is the polemical creation of Athanasius above all."[13]
- "'Arianism' as a coherent system, founded by a single great figure and sustained by his disciples, is a fantasy … based on the polemic of Nicene writers, above all Athanasius."[14]
Athanasius' purpose was to create the impression that, although the various anti-Nicene views seem to differ, they all constituted a single coherent system; all based on Arius' teachings. For example:
- "Athanasius' controversial energies … are dedicated to building up the picture of his enemies as uniformly committed … to a specific set of doctrines advanced by Arius and a small group of confederates."[15]
- "The professed purpose of Athanasius … is to exhibit the essential continuity of Arianism from first to last beneath a deceptive appearance of variety, all non-Nicene formularies of belief really lead back to the naked 'blasphemies of Arius'."[16]
- "Athanasius ... was determined to show that any proposed alternative to the Nicene formula collapsed back into some version of Arius' teaching, with all the incoherence and inadequacy that teaching displayed."[13]
Athanasius' purpose, therefore, was to argue, since Arius' theology was already formally rejected by the church, that all opposition to the Nicene Creed was also already rejected. However:
- "'Arianism,' throughout most of the fourth century, was in fact a loose and uneasy coalition of those hostile to Nicaea in general and the homoousios in particular."[17]
- "Scholars continue to talk as if there were a clear continuity among non-Nicene theologians by deploying such labels as Arians, semi-Arians, and neo-Arians. Such presentations are misleading."[18]
- "There was no such thing in the fourth century as a single, coherent 'Arian' party."[6]
For that reason:
- "The expression 'the Arian Controversy' is a serious misnomer."[19]
- "'Arianism' is a very unhelpful term to use in relation to fourth-century controversy."[13]
- "This controversy is mistakenly called Arian."[20]
Arius' writings Very little of Arius' writing has survived. "As far as his own writings go, we have no more than three letters, (and) a few fragments of another." The three are:
- The confession of faith Arius presented to Alexander of Alexandria,
- His letter to Eusebius of Nicomedia, and
- The confession he submitted to the emperor.[21]
"The Thalia is Arius' only known theological work"[22] but "we do not possess a single complete and continuous text."[23] We only have extracts from it in the writings of Arius' enemies, "mostly from the pen of Athanasius of Alexandria, his bitterest and most prejudiced enemy."[24]
Emperor Constantine ordered their burning while Arius was still living. Some recent scholars have concluded that so little survived because "the people of his day, whether they agreed with him or not, did not regard him (Arius) as a particularly significant writer".[19]
Those works which have survived are quoted in the works of churchmen who denounced him as a heretic. This leads some—but not all—scholars to question their reliability.[25] For example Bishop R.P.C. Hanson wrote:
"Athanasius, a fierce opponent of Arius … certainly would not have stopped short of misrepresenting what he said."[22] "Athanasius... may be suspected of pressing the words maliciously rather further than Arius intended."[26]
Archbishop Rowan Williams agrees that Athanasius applied "unscrupulous tactics in polemic and struggle".[27] MarkusAureliusMarcoMark (talk) 15:14, 16 November 2023 (UTC)
- @MarkusAureliusMarcoMark: Yeah, whatever. Since you removed the quotes, please write some coherent prose based upon those WP:RS. tgeorgescu (talk) 15:20, 16 November 2023 (UTC)
- Hey! I don't have the time right now to re-insert all of these in their relevant spots on the article, but I figured this might be a good opportunity for the original editor to prove themselves and re-insert things in a more nuanced way. I looked through their contributions and they seem to be pretty uniformly making wikipedia a worse place by confusing terms and adding in block quotes from scholars rather than keeping with the spirit of Wikipedia in tone or content. --MarkusAureliusMarcoMark (talk) 15:27, 16 November 2023 (UTC)
References
- ^ Anatolios 2011, p. 44.
- ^ Williams 2002, pp. 11–12.
- ^ Ayres 2004, p. 11.
- ^ Williams 2002, p. 171.
- ^ Williams 2002, p. 165.
- ^ a b Williams 2002, p. 233.
- ^ Hanson 1988, p. xvii.
- ^ Ayres 2004, pp. 56–57.
- ^ Hanson 2007, pp. 127–128.
- ^ Kopeck, M R (1985). "Neo Arian Religion: Evidence of the Apostolic Constitutions". Arianism: Historical and Theological Reassessments: 160–162.
- ^ Williams 2002, pp. 233–234.
- ^ Williams 2002, p. 234.
- ^ a b c Williams 2002, p. 247.
- ^ Williams 2002, p. 82.
- ^ Williams 2002, pp. 82–83.
- ^ Williams 2002, p. 66.
- ^ Williams 2002, p. 166.
- ^ Ayres 2004, pp. 13–14.
- ^ a b Hanson 1988, pp. xvii–xviii.
- ^ Ayres 2004, p. 13.
- ^ Hanson 1988, pp. 5–6 ; Williams 2002, p. 95 .
- ^ a b Hanson 1988, p. 10.
- ^ Williams 2002, p. 62.
- ^ Hanson 1988, p. 6.
- ^ Dennison, James T Jr. "Arius "Orthodoxos"; Athanasius "Politicus": The Rehabilitation of Arius and the Denigration of Athanasius". Lynnwood: Northwest Theological Seminary. Retrieved 2 May 2012.
- ^ Hanson 1988, p. 15.
- ^ Williams 2002, p. 239.
- C-Class level-4 vital articles
- Wikipedia level-4 vital articles in People
- C-Class vital articles in People
- C-Class biography articles
- WikiProject Biography articles
- C-Class Berbers articles
- Unknown-importance Berbers articles
- WikiProject Berbers articles
- C-Class Christianity articles
- High-importance Christianity articles
- WikiProject Christianity articles
- C-Class Philosophy articles
- Low-importance Philosophy articles
- C-Class philosopher articles
- Low-importance philosopher articles
- Philosophers task force articles
- C-Class Ancient philosophy articles
- Low-importance Ancient philosophy articles
- Ancient philosophy task force articles
- C-Class Classical Greece and Rome articles
- Mid-importance Classical Greece and Rome articles
- All WikiProject Classical Greece and Rome pages