ARIANISM

ârˈēənĭzˌəm, Christian heresy founded by Arius in the 4th cent. It was one of the most widespread and divisive heresies in the history of Christianity. As a priest in Alexandria, Arius taught (c.318) that God created, before all things, a Son who was the first creature, but who was neither equal to nor coeternal with the Father. According to Arius, Jesus was a supernatural creature not quite human and not quite divine. In these ideas Arius followed the school of Lucian of Antioch.

Rise of Arianism

Because of his heretical teachings, Arius was condemned and deprived of his office. He fled to Palestine and spread his doctrine among the masses through popular sermons and songs, and among the powerful through the efforts of influential leaders, such as Eusebius of Nicomedia and, to a lesser extent, Eusebius of Caesarea. The civil as well as the religious peace of the East was threatened, and Roman Emperor Constantine I convoked (325) the first ecumenical council (see Nicaea, First Council of). The council condemned Arianism, but the Greek term homoousios [consubstantial, of the same substance] used by the council to define the Son's relationship to the Father was not universally popular: it had been used before by the heretic Sabellius. Some, like Marcellus of Ancyra, in attacking Arianism, lapsed into Sabellianism (see under Sabellius).

Eusebius of Nicomedia used this fear of Sabellianism to persuade Constantine to return Arius to his duties in Alexandria. Athanasius, chief defender of the Nicene formula, was bishop in Alexandria, and conflict was inevitable. The Eusebians managed to secure Athanasius' exile, and when the Arian Constantius II became emperor, Catholic bishops in the East, e.g., Eustathius, were banished wholesale.

Athanasius' exile in Rome brought Pope Julius I into the struggle. A council wholly favorable to Athanasius, convened at Sardica (c.343), was avoided by the Eastern bishops and ignored by Constantius. The Catholics were left dependent on Rome for support. After the West fell to Constantius, the Eusebians reversed the decisions of Sardica in several councils (Arles, 353; Milan, 355; Boziers, 356), and Pope Liberius, St. Hilary of Poitiers, and Hosius of Cordoba were exiled. The victorious Arians, however, had now begun to quarrel among themselves.

Divisions within Arianism

The Anomoeans [Gr.,=unlike], followers of Eunomius and Aetius, were pure Arians and held that the Son bore no resemblance to the Father. The semi-Arian court party were called Homoeans [Gr.,=similar], from their teaching that the Son was simply like the Father as defined by Scripture. A third party called Homoiousians [Gr.,=like in substance] were largely prevented from joining the orthodox (Homoousian) party through a misunderstanding of terms. The Arians debated their differences at Sirmium (351–59). The final formula was an ambiguous Homoean declaration that Constantius imposed (359) on the church in two councils, Rimini (for the West) and Seleucia (for the East).

Arianism Defeated

The voices of orthodoxy, however, were not silent. In the West St. Hilary of Poitiers and in the East St. Basil the Great, St. Gregory Nazianzen, and St. Gregory of Nyssa continued to defend and interpret the Nicene formula. By 364 the West had a Catholic emperor in Valentinian I, and when the Catholic Theodosius I became emperor of the East (379), Arianism was outlawed. The second ecumenical council was convoked to reaffirm the Nicene formula (see Constantinople, First Council of), and Arianism within the empire seems to have expired at once.

However, Ulfilas had carried (c.340) Homoean Arianism to the Goths living in what is now Hungary and the NW Balkan Peninsula with such success that the Visigoths and other Germanic tribes became staunch Arians. Arianism was thus carried over Western Europe and into Africa. The Vandals remained Arians until their defeat by Belisarius (c.534). Among the Lombards the efforts of Pope St. Gregory I and the Lombard queen were successful, and Arianism finally disappeared (c.650) there. In Burgundy the Catholic Franks broke up Arianism by conquest in the 6th cent. In Spain, where the conquering Visigoths were Arians, Catholicism was not established until the mid-6th cent. (by Recared), and Arian ideas survived for at least another century. Arianism brought many results—the ecumenical council, the Catholic Christological system, and even Nestorianism and, by reaction, Monophysitism.

Bibliography

See H. M. Gwatkin, Studies of Arianism (2d ed. 1900); J. H. Newman, The Arians of the Fourth Century (1933, repr. 1968); J. Pelikan, The Emergence of the Catholic Tradition (1971).

____________________

The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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books on: Arianism  - 1143 results

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ARCHETYPAL HERESY Arianism through the Centuries William Whiston...James Austin ARCHETYPAL HERESY Arianism through the Centuries MAURICE...Publication Data Archetypal heresy: Arianism through the centuries Maurice Wiles...
...Patriarch of Alexandria, d. 373. 2. Arianism. 3. Theology, Doctrinal-History-Early...polarized between his own orthodoxy and the Arianism of the Eusebians is a polemical construct...The Eusebians in Action 125 7 The Arianism of the Eusebians 169 Conclusion...
...600. 2. Trinity Collected works. 3. Arianism Collected works. I. Clark, Mary T...Bishop of Alexandria 328-73 ; attacked Arianism at Nicaea, 325; when the Arianizing...ca. 395 , he was a strong opponent of Arianism and attacked the formula of 357 in his...
...the Incarnation 91 5 Arianism Opposed: The Words Divinity is NotDiminished...Christianity: Docetism, Patripassianism, Arianism, and Nestorianism. Second-century Docetists...consider five leading interpretations of Arianism, focusing on the interpretation offered...
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journal articles on: Arianism  - 49 results

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...on the divinity of Christ countering Arianism,(2) the heresy out of which so much has...to be a support for Miltons supposed Arianism: the essence of the Son differed in this...theologians be on guard lest they fall into Arianism over the issue (as did the author of...
...precisely, Newton was fostering both Arianism and pantheism, Hutchinson asserted...The Newtonian philosophy encouraged "Arianism." The odor of heresy hung about Newton...10 Maurice Wiles, The Secret Arianism of Isaac Newton, in Archetypal Heresy...
...contains separate chapters on Socinianism and Arianism, two heretical movements which many scholars...most commonly associated with Milton is Arianism (see especially Michael Baumans Miltons Arianism 1987.) But in his final chapter, "Arianism...
...Catholic laity lapsed and subscribed to Arianism. But as vacillating as the king was...considered Nestorian sympathizers. But Arianism, not Nestorianism, had been the concern...Africans and of Italy. In North Africa, Arianism was less a theological problem than it...
...could not have won their victory over Arianism without the persistence of Athanasiuss...office in 364 as a strong proponent of Arianism, was well aware of the strength within...foundations would strike a blow for Arianism. In 370 he issued the first imperial...
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...Grudem and Ware link their argument to Arianism, a fourth-century teaching that denied the full divinity of Christ. Arianism was ultimately rejected as heresy...are "striking similarities" between Arianism and the position on the Trinity of...
...classic Christian heresies are traceable not to wild-eyed distortions but to more subtle errors of imbalance and one-sidedness. Arianism denied Christs divine nature; Docetism denied his human nature. Each fell short of the full Christian understanding by failing...
...first ever written by a Christian, which, intriguingly, John regarded as a form of Christian heresy related to Arianism: after all, Arianism, like Islam, denied the divinity of Christ. Although he lived at the very hub of the early Islamic world...
...sought to avoid by placing man directly in touch with his Maker. We forget just how widespread the heresies of Monophysitism and Arianism were and how much the adoption of the Trinity and the Dual Nature of Christ divided the church and how strongly it was rejected...
...attempts have been made to render Christian doctrine less offensive to reason. In antiquity Docetism was one such attempt, Arianism another, Pelagianism a third. But the really heavy-duty attempt came in modern times, and we are still living in the midst...
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...It is believed that he suffered imprisonment and torture under Emperor Diocletian for standing up for his faith. He opposed Arianism during the Council of Nice. He died peacefully in his sleep on December 6, AD 343, in Myra. His relics were found incorrupt...
...system is the alternative to a form of government that gives awesome powers to one person who cant exercise them properly? The hopeful sign is that President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo is now convinced that the time for parliament-arianism has come.
...various churches during his time as bishop of Poitiers, France. He was a staunch defender of the Catholic faith, fighting against Arianism which denied the Divinity of Christ. As one of the most esteemed Latin writers of his century, his popular theological writings...
...standing around in the hate-filled mob doing absolutely nothing to stop the heady Scottish cocktail of cheap drink, rampant sect- arianism and moronic behaviour. I did see a few tourists wander up in delight at the spectacle, then recoil in horror when they realised...
...after he conquered Ravenna could be the Church of the Holy Spirit; the nearby Arian Baptistery dates from the same period. Arianism, in which Theodoric believed, was opposed by more orthodox Christians in the early centuries of their religion. Arian doctrine...


 

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ARIANISM ar e niz m, Christian heresy founded by Arius in...followed the school of Lucian of Antioch. Rise of Arianism Because of his heretical teachings, Arius was condemned...see Nicaea, First Council of ). The council condemned Arianism, but the Greek term homoousios consubstantial, of the...
...Sardinia (353 70), violent opponent of Arianism . As legate of Pope Liberius he went...against those who seemed to submit to Arianism, and on his return to Sardinia (362...own, barring all who had strayed into Arianism at all. His peremptory consecration of...
...Christian churchman and theologian, leader of the heresy of Arianism . He was bishop of Nicomedia (330 39) and patriarch of Constantinople...Constantius, a committed Arian, he systematically advanced a moderate Arianism throughout the empire. ____________________ Copyright 2009...
...Emperor Constantine the Great to solve the problems raised by Arianism . It has been said that 318 persons attended, but a more likely...Hosius, became the touchstone of orthodoxy and the bugbear of Arianism, for it established the divinity and the equality of the Son...
HOMOEANS Homoiousians, and Homoousians: see Arianism . ____________________ Copyright 2009 Columbia University Press. Used with the permission of Columbia University Press. All rights reserved.
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