-
Ignatius of
Antioch inveighs against are
often taken to be
Monophysite docetists. In his
letter to the Smyrnaeans, 7:1,
written around 110 AD, he writes:...
- divine,
although did not have a
physical body,
reflected in the
later Docetist movement.
Among the Mandaeans,
Jesus was
considered a mšiha
kdaba or "false...
- the
human form of Jesus, was mere
semblance without any true reality.
Docetists denied that
Jesus could have
truly suffered and died, as his physical...
- he was only
known through his son, Jesus. Like
later Gnostics, he was a
docetist who
rejected the
bodily resurrection of the dead.
According to the account...
- first-born of Satan."
Hippolytus reported that Marcion's
phantasmal (and
Docetist)
Christ was "revealed as a man,
though not a man", and did not
really die...
-
within a few decades.
Cyril of
Alexandria declared it a mad proposal.
Docetists, not all of whom were monophysites, held that
Jesus had no
human nature:...
- Salome,
suggest strongly that it was
attempting to deny the
arguments of
docetists,
Christians who held that
Jesus was
entirely supernatural. It also draws...
- 7: the
Ebionites use Matthew's Gospel,
Marcion mutilates Luke's, the
Docetists use Mark's, the
Valentinians use John's Irenaeus, in 'Against Heresies'...
-
Antioch urged the
exclusion of the
Gospel of
Peter from the
Church because Docetists were
using it to
bolster their theological claims,
which Serapion rejected...
-
between Clement and Origen,
denied Mary's
virginity in
partu to re****e the
docetist idea that the Son of God
could not have ****umed a
human body ("although...