Hays: another try on how an essentially immortal being can die
He tries his hand at a little ad hoc philosophizing about death.
He tries his hand at a little ad hoc philosophizing about death.
Dealing with this inconsistent triad can be hard!
Can someone with two natures be essentially immortal and die?
Can evangelical apologists answer the question “How can God die?”
His views seem to have been those of present-day biblical unitarians.
Steve Hays provides a stellar example of how not to do apologetics.
McLatchie’s mistake about historical, mainstream Christian theologies.
Why did Eusebius have to submit his own creed at the famous council of Nicea in 325?
In 344 a meeting of Eastern bishops sent a statement to the West explaining their theology.
What should we think of Athanasius’s ferocious condemnations of those he termed “Arians”?
In this episode we hear the rest (chapters 4-7) of On the Nicene Council (aka Defence of the Nicene Definition, De Decretis) by Athanasius of Alexandria.
Just got this in the mail; a very thorough symposium on Dr. Keith Ward’s Christ and the Cosmos,
With this episode we continue our series on the 4th-century creed-producing councils of catholic bishops.
Is the theory that Jesus has “two natures” more trouble than it’s worth?
All Christians have always believed that Jesus Christ is one person with two natures, a divine nature and a human nature, right?
The terms “atheism,” “monotheism,” and “polytheism” seem straightforward enough… BUT important ambiguity lurks in the root term “theism.”
An appealing theological option which is neither Nicene nor “Arian”?
If Jesus fulfills predictions about Yahweh, does this mean that he’s Yahweh?
Do Matthew, Mark, and Luke discreetly but clearly imply that Jesus is God?