Yahoo Search Busca da Web

Resultado da Busca

  1. The First Council of Constantinople (Latin: Concilium Constantinopolitanum; Greek: Σύνοδος τῆς Κωνσταντινουπόλεως) was a council of Christian bishops convened in Constantinople (now Istanbul, Turkey) in AD 381 by the Roman Emperor Theodosius I.

  2. O Primeiro Concílio de Constantinopla se realizou em 381, foi debatida a natureza de Cristo e o arianismo. Sendo este o primeiro Concílio Ecumênico realizado em Constantinopla, foi convocado de forma cesaropapista por Teodósio I em 381. [ 1][ 2] O concílio aprovou o Credo niceno-constantinopolitano, e tratou de outros assuntos teológicos.

  3. First Council of Constantinople, the second ecumenical council of the Christian church, summoned by the emperor Theodosius I and meeting in Constantinople in 381. It declared the Trinitarian doctrine of equality of the Holy Spirit with the Father and the Son and adopted the Nicene Creed.

  4. A contribuição fundamental do Terceiro Concílio de Constantinopla foi a definição dogmática a respeito das vontades e operações de Jesus. Este concílio fecha, por assim dizer, o ciclo dos concílios cristológicos. É, ao mesmo tempo, uma continuação dos concílios anteriores.

  5. First Council of Constantinople (381) Hagia Irene is a former church, now a museum, in Istanbul. Commissioned in the 4th century, it ranks as the first church built in Constantinople, and has its original atrium. In 381 the First Council of Constantinople took place in the church.

  6. First Council of Constantinople (381), the Second Ecumenical Council. Council of Constantinople (382), a council convened by Theodosius I. Council of Constantinople (383), a local council, rejected teachings of Eunomius. Council of Constantinople (394), a local council, produced several canons.

  7. The First Council of Constantinople (381), also known as the Second Ecumenical Council and I Constantinople was a gathering of 150 mostly Eastern bishops summoned by Emperor Theodosius I to confirm his earlier decree in support of the doctrine of the Council of Nicaea, which had fallen out of favor under the reigns of his predecessors.