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Greek Lessons
- The Grammar of Good Ground: Parsing Luke 8:15
- The Fever That Met the Word: A Greek Look at Matthew 8:14
- Temporal Precision and Aspectual Framing in Genesis 8:13
- Warnings in Participles: The Grammar of Subtle Caution in Deuteronomy 8:12
- Knowledge and Sacrifice: Koine Clarity and Classical Nuance in Paul’s Admonition
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Category
Tag Archives: Trinity
1700 Years Later: What the Nicene Creed Got Wrong? A Look Through Arian and Eunomian Eyes
Exactly seventeen centuries have passed since the First Council of Nicaea convened on May 20, A.D. 325 — a gathering that, by June 19, promulgated the Nicene Creed, a defining statement of Christian orthodoxy that proclaimed the Son of God to be “true God from true God” and homoousios (of one essence) with the Father. But what if we examine that landmark creed through the eyes of its earliest and most formidable critics? In the wake of Nicaea, two theologians in particular – Arius of Alexandria and, a generation later, Eunomius of Cyzicus – stood in staunch opposition to the Nicene formula.… Learn Koine Greek