podcast 242 – Dr. Beau Branson on the Monarchy of the Father – Part 4
A summary of Dr. Branson’s case and an argument against biblical unitarian theology.
A summary of Dr. Branson’s case and an argument against biblical unitarian theology.
Was 381 the dawn of imperially enforced confession of a triune God?
Is the first Catholic conciliar statement about a tripersonal God in the late 9th c.?
Can one be a trinitarian without believing in a tripersonal God?
A new paper on when and how the biggest change in the history of mainstream Christian theology occurred.
Does a doctrine of divine processions entail that the Son is less divine than the Father?
Gregory of Nazianzus and John of Damascus held that the one God is the Trinity.
Is E.J. Lowe’s four-category ontology the key to solving the multiple-natures and multiple-modes problems?
Has Dr. William Lane Craig put forward what is plausibly a biblical and possibly true two-natures theory about the Lord Jesus?
Four authors summarize their views on the Trinity.
Not all engagement is good engagement.
Most Orthodox theologians agree with Catholics and most Protestants that the one God is the Trinity.
A blogger mocks the UCA as “the Unitarian Confusion Alliance.” But on what basis?
In the New Testament “God” is nearly always the Father. But what follows from that, exactly?
Is “monarchical trinitarianism” theologically viable?
Weighing incompatible definitions of trinitarian theology and unitarian theology.
Is it true that most ancients lacked the concept of numerical identity?
What does “monarchical trinitarianism” include exactly?
How does one objectively evaluate a definition of a concept, e.g. trinitarian or unitarian?
A prolific apologist embraces so-called “monarchical trinitarianism,” on which the one God just is the Father, not the Trinity.