God-man (Christianity)

God-man (Koine Greek: θεάνθρωπος, romanized: theánthropos; Latin: deus homo) is a term which refers to the incarnation and the hypostatic union of Christ, which are two of mainstream Christianity's most widely accepted and revered christological doctrines. == Origins == The first usage of the term "God-man" as a theological concept appears in the writing of the 3rd-century Church Father Origen: This substance of a soul, then, being intermediate between God and the flesh – it being impossible for the nature of God to intermingle with a body without an intermediate instrument – the God-man is born.

Source: Wikipedia — God-man (Christianity) (CC BY-SA 4.0)

God-man (Christianity)

God-man (Koine Greek: θεάνθρωπος, romanized: theánthropos; Latin: deus homo) is a term which refers to the incarnation and the hypostatic union of Christ, which are two of mainstream Christianity's most widely accepted and revered christological doctrines. == Origins == The first usage of the term "God-man" as a theological concept appears in the writing of the 3rd-century Church Father Origen: This substance of a soul, then, being intermediate between God and the flesh – it being impossible for the nature of God to intermingle with a body without an intermediate instrument – the God-man is born.

This neuron ends here.

Source: Wikipedia "God-man (Christianity)" · CC BY-SA 4.0

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