The Dialectics of Divine Similitudes: Nicaea and the End of the Theologies of Likeness and Unlikeness
The Dialectics of Divine Similitudes: Nicaea and the End of the Theologies of Likeness and Unlikeness
Author(s): Andrei-Dragoş GiuleaSubject(s): Theology and Religion, Comparative Studies of Religion, Religion and science
Published by: Editura Doxologia
Keywords: Nicaea; likeness; consubstantiality; identity; pre-Nicene Christology;
Summary/Abstract: The theology of likeness was prevalent in the Greek-speaking Eastern part of the Roman Empire during the Christological debates of the fourth century. Except for Arius and Aetius, who advocated for a radical unlikeness, all the non-Nicene authors promoted a theology of likeness between the Father and the Son, contrasting with the Nicene theology of the identity of substance. Developed as a reaction against Modalist Monarchianism (or Sabellianism), the theology of likeness described the Son as a divine individual hypostasis and the Trinity through the concept of agreement (symphonia, i.e., ontological likeness). It rejected the notion of homoousios for its Gnostic materialistic undertones and assumed that the divine realm includes ontological degrees. The Council of Nicaea fostered a theology of identity, which culminated in the Council of Constantinople in 381, marking the end of the theologies of likeness and unlikeness. It replaced intra-trinitarian symphony with consubstantiality and removed the idea that the divine realm could include ontological degrees.
Journal: Teologie şi Viaţă
- Issue Year: CI/2025
- Issue No: 1-4
- Page Range: 43-80
- Page Count: 38
- Language: English
- Content File-PDF