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Adoptionism and sometimes
This doctrine, sometimes called " Dynamic Monarchianism " or " Adoptionism ", was declared heretical by Pope Victor I, and Theodotus was excommunicated.

Adoptionism and called
However, Elipando's Adoptionism was not the same as another ancient heresy also called Adoptionism.

Adoptionism and dynamic
Adoptionism ( also known as dynamic monarchianism ) denies the eternal pre-existence of Christ, and although it explicitly affirms his deity subsequent to events in his life, many classical trinitarians claim that the doctrine implicitly denies it by denying the constant hypostatic union of the eternal Logos to the human nature of Jesus.
* Adoptionism ( or dynamic monarchianism ) holds that God is one being, above all else, wholly indivisible, and of one nature.

Adoptionism and monarchianism
Adoptionism is one of two main forms of monarchianism ( the other is modalism, which regards " Father " and " Son " as two historical or soteriological roles of a single divine Person ).

Adoptionism and is
Under Adoptionism Jesus is currently divine and has been since his adoption, although he is not equal to the Father, per " my Father is greater than I " ().
The first known exponent of Adoptionism in the 2nd century is Theodotus of Byzantium.
In the Gospel of the Hebrews, Jesus is but a man ( see Adoptionism ) submitting to another man for the forgiveness of the " sin of ignorance " ( a lesser sin, but sin nonetheless ).
The author of multiple treatises, ranging in subject matter from the iconoclast controversy to Spanish Adoptionism to critiques of the Carolingian royal family, Agobard is best known for his critiques of Jewish religious practices and political power in the Frankish realm.

Adoptionism and Christian
Adoptionism was one position in a long series of Christian disagreements about the precise nature of Christ ( see Christology ) in the developing dogma of the Trinity, an attempt to explain the relationship between Jesus of Nazareth, both as man and God, and God the Father while confidently claiming to be uncompromisingly monotheistic.
* Adoptionism in Christian Cyclopedia
Though Beatus may have written his commentaries as a response to Adoptionism in Hispania of the late 700s, many believe that the book's popularity in monasteries stemmed from the presence in Iberia of Islam, which the Christian religious believed to represent the Antichrist.

Adoptionism and Jesus
Francesco Albani's The Baptism of Christ, when Jesus became one with God according to Adoptionism
Adoptionism was declared heresy at the end of the 2nd century and was rejected by the First Council of Nicaea, which defined the orthodox doctrine of the Trinity and identified the man Jesus with the eternally begotten Son or Word of God.
He denied the supernatural birth of Jesus, making him the son of Joseph and Mary, and distinguishing him from Christ, who descended upon him at baptism ( see also Adoptionism ) and left him again at his crucifixion.
By the end of the 2nd century, Adoptionism was declared a heresy and it was formally rejected by the First Council of Nicaea ( 325 ), which wrote the orthodox doctrine of the Trinity and identified Jesus as eternally begotten of God.

Adoptionism and was
Spanish Adoptionism was a theological position which was articulated in Umayyad and Christian-held regions of the Iberian peninsula in the 8th and 9th centuries.
In Spain, Adoptionism was opposed by Beatus of Liebana, and in the Carolingian territories, the Adoptionist position was condemned by Pope Hadrian I, Alcuin of York, Agobard, and officially in Carolingian territory by the Council of Frankfurt ( 794 ).
Paul was an early forerunner of Adoptionism.
190-200 AD ), Paul of Samosata ( 200-275 AD ), and Lucian of Antioch ( c. 240-312 AD )-held to a Christological doctrine known as Adoptionism or Dynamic Monarchianism, which was very similar to Cerinthian Christology.
The council was summoned primarily for the condemnation of Adoptionism.

Adoptionism and at
Various nontrinitarian views, such as Adoptionism, Monarchianism and Arianism existed prior to the formal definition of the Trinity doctrine in 325, 360, and 431 AD, at the Councils of Nicaea, Constantinople, and Ephesus.

Adoptionism and .
Despite the shared name of " Adoptionism " the Spanish Adoptionist Christology appears to have differed sharply from the Adoptionism of early Christianity.
Historically, many scholars have followed the Adoptionists ' Carolingian opponents in labeling Spanish Adoptionism as a minor revival of “ Nestorian ” Christology.
John C. Cavadini has challenged this notion by attempting to take the Spanish Christology in its own Spanish / North African context in his important study, The Last Christology of the West: Adoptionism in Spain and Gaul, 785 – 820.
The bishops in council condemned the heresy of Adoptionism taught by the Spanish bishops, Elipandus of Toledo and Felix of Urgel.
However, historical records show that the Paulicians were bitterly persecuted more for their gnostic and iconoclastic views than for their adherence to Adoptionism.
The doctrinal reason centered on Adoptionism.
Controversy flared, for instance, around ' Spanish Adoptionism, around the views on predestination of Gottschalk, or around the eucharistic views of Ratramnus.
Thus, it seemed to be a nuanced form of Nestorianism and came to be known as Adoptionism.

sometimes and called
Binomial distributions were treated by James Bernoulli about 1700, and for this reason binomial trials are sometimes called Bernoulli trials.
he sometimes called them `` an expiation '', and he would not allow them to be published in periodicals.
The wholesale death of cattle as a result of blizzards, and sometimes droughts, over a wide range of territory was called a `` die-up ''.
Zhuyin ( sometimes called Bopomofo ) is a semi-syllabary used to phonetically transcribe Mandarin Chinese in the Republic of China.
Affirming the consequent, sometimes called converse error, is a formal fallacy, committed by reasoning in the form:
It is sometimes colloquially called " antbear ", " anteater ", or the " Cape anteater " after the Cape of Good Hope.
The three sepals are generally colourful and bright ( which is why they are sometimes called outer tepals ), with one on each side (" lateral sepals ") and one usually at the top of the flower (" dorsal sepal "), sometimes forming a hood.
The American Civil War ( 1861 – 1865 ), in the United States often referred to as simply the Civil War and sometimes called the " War Between the States ", was a civil war fought over the secession of the Confederate States.
Non-arable land is sometimes called wasteland, badlands, worthless or no man's land.
An archipelago ( ), sometimes called an island group or island chain, is a chain or cluster of islands.
Axons make contact with other cells — usually other neurons but sometimes muscle or gland cells — at junctions called synapses.
The expectation of obtaining these sinecures drew young men towards the church in considerable numbers, and the class of abbés so formed — abbés de cour they were sometimes called, and sometimes ( ironically ) abbés de sainte espérance, ( abbés of holy hope ; or the pun, of St. Hope )— came to hold a recognized position.
This brevity gave rise to an informal abbreviation scheme sometimes called Textese, with which 10 % or more of the words in a typical SMS message are abbreviated.
The Greek god Hermes, the messenger of the gods, would take the dead soul of a person to the underworld ( sometimes called Hades or the House of Hades ).
A third option is to have the players portray Corwin's children, in an Amber-like city built around Corwin's pattern ; this is sometimes called an " Argent " game, since one of Corwin's heraldic colours is Silver.
Each atom has, in general, many orbitals associated with each value of n ; these orbitals together are sometimes called electron shells.
The set of orbitals associated with a particular value of are sometimes collectively called a subshell.
As a result of the new covenant, God's chosen people are now the corporate body of Christ, the church ( sometimes called spiritual Israel – see also Covenant theology ).
Green quartz is sometimes incorrectly called green amethyst, which is an actual misnomer and not an acceptable name for the material, the proper terminology being Prasiolite.
Baltic amber is sometimes colored artificially, but also called " true amber ".
He afterwards inhabited Montpellier ( he is sometimes called Alanus de Montepessulano ), lived for a time outside the walls of any cloister, and finally retired to Cîteaux, where he died in 1202.
He was considered the 19th century's leading expert on the geographical distribution of animal species and is sometimes called the " father of biogeography ".
* Albert, Duke of Saxony ( 1443 – 1500 ), sometimes called " Albert III "

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