Weitere Beispiele werden automatisch zu den Stichwörtern zugeordnet - wir garantieren ihre Korrektheit nicht.
Accordingly, he then proceeds to articulate the meaning of the hypostatic union.
The painting emphasizes Jesus' human constituent of hypostatic union and features a mind struggle instead of action.
Those who held to the non-Chalcedonian christologies called the doctrine of the hypostatic union 'dyophysitism'.
By contrast, Roman Catholics to date believe in the hypostatic union and the Trinity.
See also: Hypostatic union, where the term is used to describe the union of Christ's humanity and divinity.
This sophomore release, entitled Hypostatic Union, was completed in late 2010 and scheduled for an international release in early 2011.
Eventually in 451, the concept of a Hypostatic union was decreed, namely that Jesus is both fully divine and fully human.
It fully promulgated the hypostatic union, stating the human and divine natures of Christ coexist, yet each is distinct and complete.
Moreover, the Chalcedon formula adopts strange philosophical concepts such as nature and hypostatic union which are no longer used to explain and interpret religious experiences.
The Council of Chalcedon, meeting in 451, affirmed that Christ had two natures - human and divine - in hypostatic union.
The mixed chalice also represents the hypostatic union, God incarnate, that subsists in the Trinitarian view of Christ.
Presumably only spiritual ascension, not a bodily ascension (see Hypostatic union, resurrecting Lazarus)
Theologians also state that the Son, the second person of the Trinity, united himself, as a person (through the hypostatic union), to everything human (except sin), including pain.
Wary of monophysitism, Nestorius rejected Cyril's theory of a hypostatic union, proposing instead a union of will.
Principe, Walter H. Alexander of Hales' Theology of the Hypostatic Union.
As the precise nature of this union is held to defy finite human comprehension, the hypostatic union is also referred to by the alternative term "mystical union."
This dogma is inherently related to the Christological dogma of the hypostatic union which relates the divine and human natures of Jesus Christ.
The Monothelites adhered to the Chalcedonian definition of the hypostatic union: that two natures, one divine and one human, were united in the person of Christ.
Charles Balic, the Order of Hypostatic Union is the greatest Masterpiece of God's creation, greater than the creation of the Angels.
Historically, in orthodox Christianity the issue of the Hypostatic union posed the question of whether the knowledge found in the Divine component was identical with God's knowledge.
However, the Oriental Orthodoxy, the Assyrian Church of the East and the Church of the East & Abroad do not accept the hypostatic union.
The council repudiated Eutyches and his doctrine of monophysitism, described and delineated the "Hypostatic Union" and two natures of Christ, human and divine.
This is called the doctrine of the hypostatic union, which is still held today amongst most Protestant, Catholic, and Eastern Orthodox Christians, referred to as Chalcedonian Christianity.
Aquinas thus resolved the question by arguing that in the Hypostatic union Christ has two natures, one received from the Father from eternity, the other from his mother in time.