Please return to the second period of the history of Antioch in the History section >> The Third Ecumenical Council
Nestorianism

Please return to the second period of the history of Antioch in the History section >> The Third Ecumenical Council
Diodorus, Bishop of Tarsis, Theodore, Bishop of Misa, and Nestorius make “nature” physis and “hystasis” synonymous and mean the essence of actual ousia concrète (1). […]
Because of the union, Mary becomes the mother of God, and it is not permissible to say that she is only the mother of the man Jesus, because division is impossible in […]
The birthday of Christ as a human being is the head of the feasts, according to what Saint John Chrysostom says. All the other feasts of the Lord – Apparition, […]
The Three Chapters: It happened that at the court were Theodoros Askidas, Bishop of Caesarea of Cappadocia, and Domitianus, Bishop of Ankara of Edessa, the two Palestinian monks who […]
The misery of the Melkites: The Jacobites took advantage of the wars between the Romans and the Umayyads and assured them of the loyalty of the members of the Universal Church to the religion of the Roman king, calling them “melkites” and accusing them […]
The Third Ecumenical Council, which was held in the city of Ephesus in 431, declared that Mary, the mother of Jesus Christ, is truly the “Mother of God.” […]
The Fatimids and the Church 843-1025 The name and title of the Church: The Egyptian Jacobites reproached Timothy, Patriarch of Alexandria (460-482), for saying what the king said at the Chalcedonian Council (451), so they released […]
Priests of Christ are not supposed to preach, at least from the pulpit, their own ideas because hands are laid upon them in the church to preach the Word of God. The Gospel of Jesus is delivered to them…
1- Wonder: What is the relationship between God and man? How and to what extent do they relate to each other? All philosophical and religious views have varied [...]
428 - 441 The vacancy of the Constantinople see: Atticus, Bishop of Constantinople, died in the fall of the year 425. Proclus, the secretary […]