Unknown God, Known in His Activities Incomprehensibility of God during the Trinitarian Controversy of the 4th Century Origen, Gregory of Nyssa and Basil of Caesarea
معرفی کتاب «Unknown God, Known in His Activities Incomprehensibility of God during the Trinitarian Controversy of the 4th Century Origen, Gregory of Nyssa and Basil of Caesarea» نوشتهٔ Tomasz Stępień and Karolina Kochańczyk-Bonińska، منتشرشده توسط نشر Peter Lang Gmbh در سال 2018. این کتاب در فرمت pdf، زبان انگلیسی ارائه شده است.
What can man know about God? This question became one of the main problems during the 4th-century Trinitarian controversy, which is the focus of this book. Especially during the second phase of the conflict, the claims of Anomean Eunomius caused an emphatic response of Orthodox writers, mainly Basil of Caesarea and Gregory of Nyssa. Eunomius formulated two ways of theology to show that we can know both the substance (ousia) and activities (energeiai) of God. The Orthodox Fathers demonstrated that we can know only the external activities of God, while the essence is entirely incomprehensible. Therefore the 4th-century discussion on whether the Father and the Son are of the same substance was the turning point in the development of negative theology and shaping the Christian conception of God. Contents Abbreviations.....................................................................................21 1. The origins of Christian Negative Theology..........................23 1.1 The ambiguity of the Holy Scripture concerning the knowledge of God...................................................................23 1.2 Philo of Alexandria – transcendence and negative theology.......26 1.3 The apologetic usage of negative theology in the 2nd century....................................................................31 1.4 Clement of Alexandria – the unknown Father revealed in the Son of God............................................38 1.5 The incomprehensible Father in Origen...................................46 2. Incomprehensibility of God in the First Phase of the Arian Controversy...........................................................49 2.1 The knowledge of God in Arius...............................................49 2.1.1 The problem of Platonism of Arius................................ 49 2.1.2 Monad and Dyad – the problem of creation.................. 51 2.1.3 Creation ex nihilo? The problem of a “non-being”........ 57 2.1.4 The attributes of God from Arius’ perspective............... 60 2.1.5 Negative theology of Arius............................................ 62 2.2 The transcendence and knowledge of God in Athanasius.........69 2.2.1 The knowledge of the image of God.............................. 70 2.2.2 Knowing God from the creations................................... 74 2.3 Positive and negative theology reconciled in Marius Victorinus................................................................77 2.3.1 God as non-existent above existents.............................. 78 2.3.2 Negative theology in speaking of God as the One.......... 83 3. “You Worship What You Do Not Know”..............................89 3.1 “Ingeneracy” as a positive attribute and the essence of God......90 3.2 Worship and knowledge – a puzzling question.........................99 3.2.1 The distinction between “that is” and “what is”.......... 101 3.2.2 Faith and understanding.............................................. 105 3.3 You are like the Samaritans...................................................110 4. Ousia and Energeia (Substance and Activity)......................115 4.1 Eunomius and the two ways of theology................................115 4.2 The philosophical sources of οὐσία and ἐνέργεια....................119 4.2.1 Aristotle – the origins of ἐνέργεια................................. 120 4.2.2 The use of ἐνέργεια in Middle-Platonism and Plotinus....................................................................... 127 4.3 The Holy Scripture and early Christian concepts of ἐνέργεια...............................................................138 4.3.1 The Holy Scripture on the activities of God as a way to know His attributes......................................... 138 4.3.2 The Church Fathers and the sources of Eunomius’ methods................................................. 142 4.4 The knowledge of the Unbegotten substance in two ways.......149 4.4.1 The first method – from substance to activity.............. 149 4.4.2 The second method – from activity to substance.......... 158 4.5 Basil of Caesarea on language and comprehensibility of God.......................................................165 4.6 Gregory of Nyssa on knowing the activities and the essence of God.......................................................................174 4.6.1 The ontological status of God’s activities..................... 175 4.6.2 The criticism of the second way of Eunomius.............. 179 4.6.3 The activity of generation and other activities of God.......................................................... 181 4.6.4 Activities and incomprehensibility of God................... 187 5. The Development of Negative Theology in the Latter Half of the 4th Century.....................................195 5.1 Basil of Caesarea’s incomprehensibility of οὐσία....................195 5.2 Negative theology and mystical experience in Gregory of Nyssa...............................................................203 5.3 Unknown God of Gregory of Nazianzus................................210 5.4 John Chrysostom against Eunomius......................................219 Conclusion........................................................................................227 Bibliography.....................................................................................233 Index..................................................................................................245 [9783631757376 - Unknown God, Known in His Activities] Cover 1 [9783631757376 - Unknown God, Known in His Activities] Preface 7 [9783631757376 - Unknown God, Known in His Activities] Acknowledgments 17 [9783631757376 - Unknown God, Known in His Activities] Contents 19 [9783631757376 - Unknown God, Known in His Activities] Abbreviations 23 [9783631757376 - Unknown God, Known in His Activities] 1. The origins of Christian Negative Theology 25 [9783631757376 - Unknown God, Known in His Activities] 2. Incomprehensibility of God in the First Phase of the Arian Controversy 51 [9783631757376 - Unknown God, Known in His Activities] 3. “You Worship What You Do Not Know” 91 [9783631757376 - Unknown God, Known in His Activities] 4. Ousia and Energeia (Substance and Activity) 117 [9783631757376 - Unknown God, Known in His Activities] 5. The Development of Negative Theology in the Latter Half of the 4th Century 197 [9783631757376 - Unknown God, Known in His Activities] Conclusion 229 [9783631757376 - Unknown God, Known in His Activities] Bibliography 235 [9783631757376 - Unknown God, Known in His Activities] Index 247 This book deals with the 4th-century Trinitarian controversy, which had a profound impact on negative theology. Eunomius claimed that we can know both the substance (ousia) and activities (energeiai) of God, whereas Cappadocians demonstrated the incomprehensibility of God’s essence, and the possibility of knowing his external activities. Christian negative theology - Incomprehensibility of God - Trinitarian controversy of the 4th century - Substance (ousia) of God - Activity (energeia) of God - Arius - Aetius - Eunomius - Athanasius - Marius Victorinus - Basil the Great - Gregory of Nyssa - Gregory of Nazianzus - John Chrysostom
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