monophysitism
nounEtymology
From Byzantine Greek μονοφυσιτισμός (monophusitismós), from μόνος (mónos, “only one”) + φύσις (phúsis, “nature”) + -ισμός (-ismós, “-ism”), hence “belief in a single nature”.
- borrowed from μονοφυσιτισμός
Definitions
A Christological doctrine, generally considered heterodox or heretical, holding that…
A Christological doctrine, generally considered heterodox or heretical, holding that Jesus Christ has a single nature, which is either wholly divine or partially human and partially divine.
- To claim that Jesus did not have human feelings amounts to monophysitism.
- But of monophysitism, Eutychianism, mixture or fusion of the natures, transformation of the one nature into the other, or the absorption of humanity into divinity Schwenckfeld was accused, as previously observed.
The beliefs and practices of the Oriental Orthodox Church.
- Aramaic was the vernacular language of Syria until it was replaced by Arabic. Syriac remained the ecclesiastical language of Monophysitism.
Alternative letter-case form of monophysitism.
- Gibbon's successors had alternative suggestions, the most persistent of which has been that the Blues were supporters of religious orthodoxy and the Greens of Monophysitism.
The neighborhood
- neighbormonophysite
- neighbormonophysitic
- neighbormonophysitical
- neighborArianism
- neighborMelkitism
- neighborNestorianism
- neighborApollinarianism
- neighborEutychianism
Vish — recursive loop
No curated loop yet for monophysitism. Loops are being traced one word at a time while the ingestion pipeline matures.
sense glosses and etymology drawn from English Wiktionary · source · CC-BY-SA