- is a view of the nature of Christ. The name comes from the chief representative of this doctrine, Apollo, who was in the years 360-392 Bishop of Laodicea. By interpreting the dogma proclaimed at the Council of Nicaea (325), who, in the face of Arianism, proclaimed that, apart from human nature, Christ fully possessed divine nature. Apollinaris stated that in order for the divinity of Christ to be fully manifest in him, his human nature must have been incomplete, for example, he had no rational soul. Apollinarism has questioned the integrity of the human nature of Christ, confessing that He possesses only one, mixed and modified nature, according to the famous formula of the Apollo of Laodicea: Apollinarism also put a special emphasis on the holiness of Christ.
He came up with a misunderstanding of the words of the Gospel:
The crisis associated with this doctrine has led to specifying in the theology of concepts such as:
These terms in apollinarism were practically synonymous.
Apollinarism was condemned by the Constantinople Council I (381). Bibliography
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