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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Gregory Nazianzen’s Poems on Scripture: Introduction, Translation, and Commentary

Dunkle, Brian P. January 2009 (has links)
Thesis advisor: Khaled Anatolios / Gregory of Nazianzus (c.326-389), preacher, poet, ecclesiastic, and saint, was born and spent much of his life on the country estate of Karbala, near the center of the Roman province of Cappadocia, in modern-day Turkey. Renowned as the “Theologian” – a title he shares with John the Evangelist in the Orthodox Church – Gregory has had a profound and lasting influence on the history of Christian doctrine and spirituality. / Thesis (STL) — Boston College, 2009. / Submitted to: Boston College. School of Theology and Ministry. / Discipline: Sacred Theology.
2

TRINITARIAN GRAMMARS: A COMPARISON OF GREGORY OF NAZIANZUS AND SOME CONTEMPORARY MODELS

Goad, Keith Wesley 16 December 2010 (has links)
There is a growing trend among contemporary models to claim that their model is based upon the Eastern tradition in opposition to the Western model represented by Augustine. The purpose of the dissertation is to describe the doctrines of the knowledge of God and the Trinity as articulated by Gregory of Nazianzus, the Eastern father who defined these doctrines for the Eastern tradition, for the purpose of critically evaluating the contemporary models that seek to find their historical precedent in the Cappadocians. The first two chapters demonstrate Gregory's doctrines of the knowledge of God and the Trinity in order to demonstrate how his numerous confessions all relate to and modify one another. Gregory's doctrine of God was based upon God's nature being infinite and only known through his actions and names. Gregory's doctrine of the Trinity is multifaceted so that he uses a number of grammars to defend the unity and the three persons. Chapter four compares Augustine's On The Trinity to Gregory's grammars to provide a concrete comparison between the two traditions to demonstrate that the typical paradigm that contrasts the East and West is oversimplified and wrong. The contemporary models will then be analyzed in light of Gregory's grammars and model in order to demonstrate that they have introduced concepts and grammars that are contrary to that of Gregory. The contemporary theologians analyzed include Karl Rahner, Cornelius Plantinga, Bruce Ware, and Thom McCall. The contemporary models are wrong to claim Gregory as their historical precedent because they fail to meet the most basic standards of Orthodoxy as presented by Gregory. One of the main problems in the contemporary treatment of Gregory is that his doctrine is oversimplified so that one aspect or grammar is emphasized and the others are ignored. There is confusion over the proper relationship between the economic and immanent Trinities. There is also a number of problems in how the terms one, unity, essence, and person have been redefined by the contemporary models when compared to Gregory's doctrine. The final argument is that the contemporary models fail to provide the necessary grammars and confessions that safeguard the doctrine of the Trinity and promote worship when compared to Gregory. / This dissertation is under embargo until 2012-12-15.
3

Greek philosophy and christian tradition in St. Gregory of Nazianzus : unity-triplicity

Lialiou, Despo Ath January 1982 (has links)
The purpose of this thesis is the analysis of the way by which St. Gregory the Theologian used Greek philosophy and religious ideas of Classical Hellenism in order to formulate the Christian Trinitarian Dogma, which, according to St. Gregory, is the only and unique criterion for approaching "δρνοδόξωσ" the Christian Cosmology and Anthropology. The very confusion between Greek philosophy and the dogmatic doctrine of Greek Fathers stems from the fact that a common terminology exists on both side. This was not a matter of confusion for St. Gregory since he understood the Holy Dispensation as the very mystery of God's manifestation through the history of Creation. Exposing the theological presuppositions he defines the Framework according to which the Orthodox theologian must theologize without running the risk of becoming a heretic. Purification, inactivity, and finally theoria constitutes the life of the theologian par excellence. The O.T. and the N.T. as well as the Ecclesiastical tradition are the sources of the Orthodox Dogma, the declaration of which is characterized by measure and symmetry (Via Media), in contrast to the heretical views which always move to extremes. Furthermore for St. Gregory the Christian theologian is the true philosopher who after painful preparation reaches such a level of objectivity that he becomes a voice of the Holy Spirit. In the same framework of theological objectivity St. Gregory examines the divine Names. He classifies Them into, a) Names proper to Essence, and b) Common Names of the divine Authority and of Dispensation. This latter introduces the Triplicity of the Persons within the Godhead, whereas the Former ones state Its Unit. On the other hand St. Gregory is particularly aware of Greek Monotheism, either that of the philosophers or of theurgical religion but he calls the latter polytheia because of its abstract notion of Oneness for a multiplicity of gods. In addition, instead of an abstract essence of the philosophers and their theory of ontological subordination of the Hypostaseis, a theory which leads towards coeternity of the ultimate Principle with Creation, St. Gregory introduces the paradoxical schema "Μονὰσ ἐγ Τριάδι", and vice versa, and in so doing he excludes a non-hypostatized essence or three non-substantial Hypostaseis. St. Gregory follows St. Athanasius concerning the Trinitarian Dogma and shares with the so called Cappadocian Fathers the main characteristics of the Cappadocian Trinitarian doctrine about Unity and Triplicity of God. Furthermore he uses the term homoousion to safeguard and confess the Unity of the three Hypostaseis and to declare unambiguously the divinity of the Holy Spirit, Whom he clearly calls "θεόσ". This statement is St. Gregory's personal contribution to formulation of the Trinitarian Dogma, a point that later became the rule of Orthodoxy, particularly concerning the Eastern Church. The last chapter is devoted to the question of the Trinitarian Images., which the heretics used in order to explain away the "παράδοζογ" character of the theologia by means of logical devices. Although St. Gregory is reluctant to apply images borrowed from the created nature to the Persons of the Holy Trinity, he does do so in a moderate and qualified way in order to expose and refute only the heretical positions.
4

A historical-critical evaluation of the play Christus patiens, traditionally attributed to Gregory Nazianzus

Swart, G.J. (Gerhardus Jacobus), 1955- 02 June 2010 (has links)
Please read the abstract in the section 00front of this document / Thesis (DLitt)--University of Pretoria, 2010. / Ancient Languages / unrestricted
5

Mary: virgin mother in the thought of the Cappadocian Fathers

Nachef, Antoine, B.S.O. January 1997 (has links)
No description available.

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