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  • ...e "Patristic Interpretation", or the view held by [[Augustine of Hippo|St. Augustine]], [[Jerome], and other early [[Church Fathers]], views Revelation as an at ...'s first ascension and second coming. This view is often associated with [[Augustine of Hippo]]. Amillennialists differ on the time frame of the millennium as
    37 KB (5,704 words) - 02:41, 13 December 2020
  • ...have taken the position that dishonesty of any kind is never justified. [[Augustine]], for example, claimed that all lies are forbidden by [[God]]. [[Immanuel
    14 KB (2,219 words) - 22:27, 12 December 2020
  • ...as as a Beatific Vision of God's essence in the next life.[5] According to Augustine's Confessions, he lived much of his life without God. He sinned much and re
    24 KB (3,444 words) - 00:14, 13 December 2020
  • The Middle Ages, however, championed the perfection of 6: Augustine and Alcuin wrote that God had created the world in 6 days because that was ...ith calls to perfection. Many of these are collected in a discourse by St. Augustine, De perfectione iustitiae hominis. They begin already with the Old Testamen
    49 KB (7,737 words) - 22:37, 12 December 2020
  • ...f guilt from [[Judaism]], Persian and Roman, mostly as interpreted through Augustine, who adapted Plato's ideas to Christianity. The [[Latin]] word for guilt is
    14 KB (2,246 words) - 01:05, 13 December 2020
  • mystagogic teaching. Augustine syncretized this divinely ‘inspired’soul with NT
    14 KB (2,281 words) - 13:47, 22 September 2009
  • mystagogic teaching. Augustine syncretized this divinely ‘inspired’soul with NT
    15 KB (2,380 words) - 22:29, 12 December 2020
  • **ca. 600 [[Christianity]] introduced among Anglo-Saxons by St. [[Augustine]], missionary from Rome. Irish missionaries also spread Celtic form of Chri
    14 KB (2,202 words) - 00:57, 13 December 2020
  • ...hilosophers through history—[[Plato]], [[Aristotle]], [[Augustine of Hippo|Augustine]], [[René Descartes|Descartes]], [[Friedrich Nietzsche|Nietzsche]]—have
    35 KB (5,154 words) - 01:39, 13 December 2020
  • In the Christian tradition, [[Augustine of Hippo]] was a cornerstone of Christian philosophy and theology. He live
    19 KB (2,915 words) - 23:45, 12 December 2020
  • ...up and synthesised by [[Plotinus]]. Plotinus in turn heavily influenced [[Augustine]]'s [[theology]], and from there Aquinas and the Scholastics. The '''''[[Gr
    20 KB (2,962 words) - 22:42, 12 December 2020
  • In the Middle Ages, [[Augustine]] asked the fundamental question about the nature of time. A traditional re
    29 KB (4,429 words) - 01:20, 13 December 2020
  • *Augustine Daniels, O.S.B., ed., "Eine lateinische Rechtfertigungsschrift des Meister
    24 KB (3,561 words) - 01:24, 13 December 2020
  • ...ce; Plato, Aristotle and Hellenistic thought; From the New Testament to St Augustine; Medieval Islamic and Christian ideas; Renaissance Platonism, Hermeticism a that there were two cities inhabited by humans, much as Augustine had also argued:
    138 KB (23,048 words) - 22:30, 12 December 2020
  • ...nity|Christian]] and [[Islam|Muslim]] theologian philosophers, including [[Augustine of Hippo]], Many notable [[Medieval philosophy|medieval philosophers]] deve
    33 KB (4,925 words) - 23:57, 12 December 2020
  • ...ationally. Through that era, there developed a few geniuses who wrote—St. Augustine, Thomas Aquinas, St. Francis of Assisi and others—who began to think and
    42 KB (7,412 words) - 20:19, 3 August 2014
  • ...atin radicalis relating to or forming the root, original, primary (c400 in Augustine), radical, fundamental (a1250, 1620 in British sources), of or belonging to
    59 KB (9,406 words) - 02:35, 13 December 2020
  • ..., they believed, they alone were the elect of God. While the opposition of Augustine and others eventually curbed its influence and growth, Donatism persisted i
    37 KB (5,870 words) - 22:11, 12 December 2020
  • ...rsity Press; Religious Philosophy, 1961 Harvard University Press; and "St. Augustine and the Pelagian Controversy" in Religious Philosophy </ref> ...rsity Press; Religious Philosophy, 1961 Harvard University Press; and "St. Augustine and the Pelagian Controversy" in Religious Philosophy
    78 KB (11,964 words) - 23:56, 12 December 2020
  • ...as to their authority, though they are not received by the Jews, saith St. Augustine, (lib. 18, De Civ. Dei, c. 36), they are received by the church: who, in se
    123 KB (22,112 words) - 23:45, 12 December 2020

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