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The Patristic Period

The Patristic Period. Nicea , Constantinople, Ephesus, and Chalcedon The One and the Many Constructs and the Hypostatic Union The One Over the Many: Gnosticism, Apollinarius , Eutyches The Many Over the One: Ebionites and Arius The One and the Many: Nestorius. The Patristic Period.

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The Patristic Period

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  1. The Patristic Period • Nicea, Constantinople, Ephesus, and Chalcedon • TheOne and the Many Constructs and the Hypostatic Union • The One Over the Many: Gnosticism, Apollinarius, Eutyches • The Many Over the One: Ebionites and Arius • The One and the Many: Nestorius

  2. The Patristic Period • The One in the Many • The Ante-Nicene Fathers • The Nicene and Post-Nicene Fathers • “Light of Light” • Substance/Nonsubstance Seal/ Form Divine Nature Prime/Formeless Matter Human Nature

  3. The Medieval Period • Plato/Augustine-(500-1200) • The Second Council of Constantinople • The Third Council of Constantinople • The Second Council of Nicea • Aristotle/Aquinas—1200-1600 Formed Matter

  4. Chapter 6: Theology Proper • The Biblical Period • The Patristic Period • The Medieval Period • The Modern Period • The Contemporary Period • Conclusion

  5. The Biblical Period • The Old Testament • The New Testament

  6. The Patristic Period • Monotheism, Judaism, and the One over the Many • Syncretism, the Roman Imperial Cult, and the Many over the One

  7. The Medieval Period • Proofs for the Existence of God • Anselm’s Ontological Argument • Aquinas’ Cosmological and Teleological Arguments • Nominalism’s Rejection of Universals

  8. The Medieval Period • Metaphysics and the Incarnation of Christ • Anselm, Plato, and the Incarnation • Aquinas, Aristotle, and the Incarnation

  9. The Medieval Period • Conclusion to the Medieval Period and the Debate Regarding the Ontology of God

  10. The Modern Period • The One Over the Many: Deism, Idealism and Romanticism • Deism • Idealism and Romanticism • The Many Over the One: Atheism • Hume’s Skepticism • Comte’s Positivism/Scientism • Kant, God, and Christ

  11. The Contemporary Period • The One Over the Many: Romanticism, Metaphysicians, Marxism • The Many Over the One: Logical Positivism, Sartrean Existentialism, and the New Atheism

  12. The Contemporary Period • The One in the Many: Catholics and Protestant Apologists • Catholics and Atheists • Protestants and Natural Theology • The Cosmological Argument • The Teleological Argument • The Moral Argument • The Ontological Argument

  13. Chapter 7: General Revelation • The Biblical Period • The Patristic Period • The Medieval Period • The Modern Period • The Contemporary Period • Conclusion

  14. The Biblical Period • The Old Testament • The New Testament • Paul: The One (Faith) Over the Many (Reason) • The Critical Philosophers in Acts 17: The Many (Reason) Over the One (Faith) • Luke the Apologist: The One (Faith) in the Many (Reason)

  15. The Patristic Period • The One (Faith) over the Many (Reason): Tertullian and Irenaeus • The Many (Reason) over the One (Faith): The Gnostics and Celsus • The One (Faith) in the Many (Reason): Justin Martyr, the School of Alexandria (and Augustine)

  16. The Medieval Period • The One (Faith) over the Many (Reason): Anselm, Voluntarism, and Mysticism • The Many (Reason) over the One (Fait): Nominalism • The One (Faith) in the Many (Reason): Aquinas

  17. The Modern Period • The One (Faith) over the Many (Reason): Luther and Calvin • The Many (Reason) over the One (Faith): Erasmus • The One (Faith) in the Many (Reason): Aquinas’ Heritage

  18. The Contemporary Period • The One (Faith) over the Many (Reason): Barth • The Many (Reason) over the One (Faith): Bultmann • The One (Faith) in the Many/ (Reason): Existential Thomists and the New Protestant Apologists

  19. Chapter 8: Special Revelation • The Biblical Period • The Patristic Period • The Medieval Period • The Modern Period • The Contemporary Period • Conclusion

  20. The Biblical Period • The Old Testament • The Divine Nature of the Old Testament • The Human Nature of the Old Testament • Inerrancy • The Old Testament’s Anticipation of the Analogy of the Incarnation and Inspiration • The One in the Many

  21. The Biblical Period • The New Testament • The Divine Nature of the New Testament • The Human Side of the New Testament • The Inerrancy of the New Testament • Incarnation and Inspiration • The One and the Many • The One in the Many • The One over the Many • The Many (Humanity) over the One (Divinity)

  22. The Patristic Period • The Divine Nature of the Bible • The Humanity of the Scriptures • The Inerrancy of the Bible • The Analogy of the Incarnation and Inspiration

  23. The Patristic Period • The One and the Many • The One in the Many • Athenagoras(Second Century) • Novatus (Third Century) • Augustine (Fifth Century) • Excursus: The Rogers and Mckim Proposal • The One Over the Many • The Many Over the One

  24. The Medieval Period • The Divinity of the Bible • The Humanity of the Bible • The Inerrancy of the Bible • The Analogy of the Incarnation and Inspiration

  25. The Medieval Period • The One, the Many, and Inspiration • The One (Divinity) in the Many (Humanity) • The One (Divinity) Over the Many (Humanity) • The Many (Humanity) over the One (Divinity)

  26. The Modern Period • The Divine Nature of Scripture • The Human Side of Scripture • Inerrancy • The Incarnation and Inspiration

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