Catechism 101
This lecture moves from the Nicene Creed’s Christological section into the Holy Spirit, explaining how the Nicene-Constantinopolitan Creed was developed at Nicaea (325) and Constantinople (381), and why the early draft barely mentioned the Spirit. It introduces the post-Nicaea heresy of Pneumatomachianism (“spirit-fighters”), which denied the Spirit’s divinity and personhood, and highlights the Cappadocian Fathers’ defense. Abbot Ankido defines divine personhood through Trinitarian relations and describes the Spirit as the eternal love “breath” between Father and Son. Using Scripture from Matthew, John, Acts, and Paul, he argues the Spirit acts and speaks as a person, transforms believers through baptism, and empowers the Church beyond mere moral virtue. The episode also previews the Filioque controversy and frames “from the Father through the Son” as a key formulation. ––– New episodes drop weekly. Subscribe on Apple Podcasts or Spotify for the audio versions, or visit the Qurbana Media YouTube channel for video: https://youtu.be/S4VGPrCf7HQ [https://youtu.be/S4VGPrCf7HQ]
9 episoder
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