![]() |
| Welcome to Religious Forums |
| Welcome Guest to ReligiousForums.com . You are currently not registered. When you become registered you will be able to interact with our large base of already registered users discussing topics. Some annoying Ads will also disappear when you register. Registering doesn't cost a thing and only takes a few seconds. We provide areas to chat and debate all World Religions. Please go to our register page! |
|
|||||||
![]() |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
|
#1
|
||||
|
||||
|
"Arian Catholicism claims to be based on the early Catholic Church, and especially some of the teachings of Arius, who taught, among other things, that Christ was not of the same substance, i.e. not co-substantial, with God and therefore was not God, and did not exist before he was born on earth and therefore was not co-eternal with God, seeing the pre-incarnate Jesus as a divine being but nonetheless created by (and consequently inferior to) the Father at some point, before which the Son did not exist. Arius concluded that Jesus Christ was not an eternal being ('Once there was a time when he was not'). Other theologians and bishops have argued along similar grounds resulting in the religious concepts of Apollinarianism, Nestorianism, Monophysitism/Eutychianism, Monothelitism." (from Wikipedia)
The Holy Catholic and Apostolic Church Last edited by Lucian; 02-22-2008 at 03:52 PM. |
|
#2
|
|||
|
|||
|
EDIT: Suckered into a DIR again
Last edited by Francine; 02-22-2008 at 06:08 PM. |
|
#3
|
||||
|
||||
|
Well, Athanasianism isn't the truth so it hardly matters what Athanasians reject.
![]() The Church is one and undivided. Roman Catholicism is not the Church, it is outside the Church. Also, this is the Nontrinitarian forum. |
|
#4
|
|||
|
|||
|
Okay, this happened to me before, on the LDS forum. I don't surf by forums, I surf by latest posts, but when someone calls me on it, I put them on permignore so I can't be tempted to violate the DIR rule again. So, uh, buh bye.
|
![]() |
| Thread Tools | |
| Display Modes | |