|
Canada-0-Manicuring Κατάλογοι Εταιρεία
|
Εταιρικά Νέα :
- Gnosticism | Definition, Texts, Movements, Influence | Britannica
Gnosticism, any of various Greco-Roman philosophical and religious movements prominent in the early Christian era
- What is gnosticism? | Britannica
Gnosticism is a term modern scholars have used to refer to any of various philosophical and ideological movements in the Greco-Roman world in the early Christian era, particularly in the 2nd century The meaning of the term is, however, disputed, and there is little scholarly consensus on whether these movements are in fact related and, if so, how
- Gnosticism - Students | Britannica Kids | Homework Help
Gnosticism drew upon and in turn influenced many religions of the time, especially early Christianity A characteristic Gnostic belief is that the material world is imperfect and thus inferior to the perfect spiritual realm The material world was created not by the true, good God but by a lesser being
- Gnosticism summary | Britannica
Gnosticism , Religious and philosophical movement popular in the Roman world in the 2nd–3rd century ad
- Gnosticism - Christianity, Judaism, Paganism | Britannica
Gnosticism - Christianity, Judaism, Paganism: Although gnostic movements of various types flourished in the formative period of Christianity, they were likely a minority in most places At a time when there was still no fixed Christian Bible or uniform church organization, their often elaborate creation myths and eschatologies constituted some of the earliest attempts at a systematic
- Archon | Definition Mythology | Britannica
Archon, in gnosticism, any of a number of world-governing powers that were created with the material world by a subordinate deity called the Demiurge (Creator) Gnostics were religious dualists who held that matter is inferior and the spirit is good and that salvation is attained by esoteric knowledge, or gnosis
- Demiurge | Creator, World-Soul Gnosticism | Britannica
Demiurge, in philosophy, a subordinate god who fashions and arranges the physical world to make it conform to a rational and eternal ideal Plato adapted the term, which in ancient Greece had originally been the ordinary word for “craftsman,” or “artisan” (broadly interpreted to include not only
- Gnosticism - Myths, Beliefs, Teachings | Britannica
Gnosticism - Myths, Beliefs, Teachings: As Valentinian tradition illustrates, the myths usually categorized as gnostic do not always demonize the creator, as was the case in the Apocryphon of John What they share is not necessarily an extreme hostility toward the creator or the material cosmos but simply an interpretation of biblical narrative that introduces—in a variety of ways—inferior
- Docetism | Gnostic, Dualism Heresy | Britannica
Docetism, (from Greek dokein, “to seem”), Christian heresy and one of the earliest Christian sectarian doctrines, affirming that Christ did not have a real or natural body during his life on earth but only an apparent or phantom one Though its incipient forms are alluded to in the New Testament,
- Heretical Movements, Gnosticism, Arianism - Britannica
Christianity - Heretical Movements, Gnosticism, Arianism: Gnosticism, from the Greek gnōstikos (one who has gnōsis, or “secret knowledge”), was an important movement in the early Christian centuries—especially the 2nd—that offered an alternative to emerging orthodox Christian teaching Gnostics taught that the world was created by a demiurge or satanic power—which they often
|
|