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The Human Condition in Hilary of Poitiers

open access: yes, 2017
The mid-fourth-century bishop Hilary of Poitiers is better known for his Trinitarian works and theology, but this book assesses his view of the human condition using his commentaries in particular. The commentary on Psalm 118 is shown to be more closely related to Origen’s than previously thought; this in turn explains how his articulations of sin ...
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exaly   +3 more sources

Hilary of Poitiers’ De Trinitate and the Name(s) of God

open access: yesVigiliae Christianae, 2010
Abstract“Hilary of Poitiers’ De Trinitate and the Name(s) of God” investigates the implications of the ancient nomos/physis debate to Trinitarian theology. While the Cappadocians, countering Heteroousians, eventually demonstrated that naturalist understanding of naming did not work for Christian theology, Hilary still assumed that it did.
Tarmo Toom
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Hilary of Poitiers on the Trinity

2008
Abstract Hilary of Poitiers (c300–368), who was instrumental in shaping the development of pro-Nicene theology in the West, combined two separate works, a treatise on faith (De Fide) and a treatise against the “Arians” (Adversus Arianos), to create De Trinitate; his chief theological contribution to the 4th-century Trinitarian debates ...
exaly   +2 more sources

Hilary of Poitiers

2001
Lawrence Gushee, James W. McKinnon
exaly   +2 more sources

The Capitulation of Liberius and Hilary of Poitiers

Phoenix, 1992
THE ARREST OF LIBERIUS, the bishop of Rome, by the praefectus urbi was an event conspicuous enough to be recorded by Ammianus Marcellinus, despite his evident determination to say as little as possible about the internal affairs of the Christian church during the reign of Constantius (15.7.6-10).
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