Weitere Beispiele werden automatisch zu den Stichwörtern zugeordnet - wir garantieren ihre Korrektheit nicht.
The first Nicene Council was probably held in what would become the now ruined mosque of Orchan.
Priests, deacons, and subdeacons are forbidden to live with women other than such as were permitted by the Nicene Council.
This council reaffirmed the repudiation of this practice by Second Nicene Council.
The Nicene Council of 325 sought to devise rules whereby all Christians would celebrate Easter on the same day.
By 327, Emperor Constantine I had begun to regret the decisions that had been made at the Nicene Council.
On the other side, Constantius was becoming somewhat hostile to the influence of all of the new movements which had sprung up after the Nicene council.
After the Nicene council and against its conclusions, he eventually recalled Arius from exile and banished Athanasius of Alexandria to Trier.
20], 1791 (reckons the Nicene council as the beginning of the reign of Antichrist, and the French revolution as the omen of its fall).
Bodey had a controversy with Lawrence Humphrey, Dean of Winchester, on the Nicene Council, and his notes from Eusebius still exist.
Christianity in the 8th century - 2nd Nicene council, John of Damascus, spread of Christianity, Christianity and Islam
Some critics of the book emphasized that only the Eastern Paschalion holds to the Nicene Council's 4th century prohibition on celebrating the resurrection before the Jewish Passover.
html#20030427 A discussion of the Nicene Council's Easter decision and of how some commentators exaggerate the scope of the Council's decision]
A Critical History of Christian Literature and Christian Doctrine from the Death of the Apostles to the Nicene Council (i.-iii., 1864-1866; new ed.
Even when a particular Protestant confessional formula does not mention the Nicene Council or its creed, its doctrine is nonetheless always asserted, as, for example, in the Presbyterian Westminster Confession of 1647.
In Jerome's Prologue to Judith he claims that the Book of Judith was "found by the Nicene Council to have been counted among the number of the Sacred Scriptures".
His "Syntagma" or collection of Acts of the First Nicene Council has hitherto been looked upon as the work of a sorry compiler; recent investigations, however, point to its being of some importance.
In her room, before she went down to the parlor, she brought out all her knowledge to protect her-her algebra and when Caesar landed in England and the Nicene council and the verb être.
Also the charges of Christian corruption by Constantine (see the Constantinian shift) ignore the fact that Constantine deposed Athanasius of Alexandria and later restored Arius, who had been branded a heresiarch by the Nicene Council.
But because heretical circles continued to copy and hide this text, the second Nicene Council, three hundred years later, had to repeat the judgment, directing that "No one is to copy [this book]: not only so, but we consider that it deserves to be consigned to the fire."
It has also been noted that this Greek term "homoousian", which Athanasius of Alexandria favored, and was ratified in the Nicene Council and Creed, was actually a term reported to also be used and favored by the Sabellians in their Christology.
We absolutely forbid priests, deacons, and subdeacons to associate with concubines and women, or to live with women other than such as the Nicene Council (canon 3) for reasons of necessity permitted, namely, the mother, sister, or aunt, or any such person concerning whom no suspicion could arise.
Theodulf was also almost certainly responsible for composing the Libri Carolini (ca. 793) which served as a rebuttal to a faulty translation of the Second Nicene Council of 787 which was mistakenly interpreted as saying that the worship of images was now acceptable in the church.