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- Eutherios_of_Tyana abstract "Eutherius of Tyana, metropolitan bishop of Tyana (site near Niğde, Turkey) in Cappadocia II, features in the context of the 3rd Oecumenical Council (431) at Ephesus, where he belonged to the eastern delegation led by John of Antioch. Dismayed by the deposition of his fellow exponent of Antiochene Christological thinking, Nestorius, precipitated by Cyril of Alexandria's vigorous objection to the Christotokos (instead of Theotokos) expression which Nestorius used, Eutherius writes a lively text of protest, which in turn brings about his own deposition and exile, initially at Scythopolis in Palestine. John of Antioch in the Act of Union of 433 reconciled with Cyril and pursued a policy of abandoning some of the positions he had once held and repression of those who continued to express them. His successor and nephew, Domnus, however advocated conciliation and Eutherius was able to escape from Scythopolis and take refuge with Irenaeus, the new bishop of Tyre (who as a senior civil servant (comes) had been involved at a key level in the organisation of the Ephesus council and as go-between for the delegations and Emperor Theodosius II, and whose pro-oriental sympathies had led to a term of exile in Petra).The text of the Protest appears to have survived largely through attribution to Athanasius. In the way of attestation Patriarch Photius in his Bibliotheca is closer to the mark in ascribing it to Theodoret. Euthymios Zigabenos cites without naming an author, but Severus of Antioch in his Contra Impium Grammaticum quotes from with attribution to Eutherius of Tyana. (Both the latter authors are referring to chapter 20, which together with 21 may well constitute a slightly later addition by Eutherius to his original text).The Protest (Antilogia) against those who advocate a suffering God (Theopaschism) is written in a clear and vigorous style using various rhetorical devices (formulae, punch-lines, diatribe, metaphor - e.g.,in chapter 20, reaching a safe harbour after the risk of piracy) and attempting to expose the absurdity of his Alexandrian school opponents' arguments. He uses the terminology derived from Theodore of Mopsuestia and Nestorios, e.g. sunapheia. Minor incoherences (e.g.in referencing scriptural quotations) do not essentially compromise the high quality of his expression. Coherence, or rather the incoherence of the opposition's reasoning, is a recurring theme. Such qualities ensure that this work is no ordinary pamphlet.Eutherius' attitude to the Jews is interesting: like John Chrysostom he rejects Judaizing tendencies among Christians; he reproaches Jews with failing to discern the signs of his divinity performed by Christ, but this very ignorance clears them of the charge of deicide (they had no idea that they were crucifying God, and, in Antiochene thinking, suffering fully attains the human nature of Christ (no docetism here) but in no way the divine since God is impassible). It is better to see Jewish social advancement than Christians holding such views.In any case Christ has pronounced forgiveness.Eutherius' other surviving work consists of 5 letters preserved in Latin in the Collectio Casinensis (Letters 162, 163, 204, 205, 291), 4 addressed to fellow Antiochene theologian bishops, John of Antioch, Helladius of Tarsus, Alexander of Hierapolis together with Theodoret of Cyrrhus, Alexander of Hierapolis individually, and one to Pope Sixtus III in Rome.".
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- Eutherios_of_Tyana wikiPageWikiLink Alexander_of_Hierapolis_(Syria).
- Eutherios_of_Tyana wikiPageWikiLink Antioch.
- Eutherios_of_Tyana wikiPageWikiLink Antiochene.
- Eutherios_of_Tyana wikiPageWikiLink Athanasius.
- Eutherios_of_Tyana wikiPageWikiLink Athanasius_of_Alexandria.
- Eutherios_of_Tyana wikiPageWikiLink Beit_Shean.
- Eutherios_of_Tyana wikiPageWikiLink Cappadocia.
- Eutherios_of_Tyana wikiPageWikiLink Category:5th-century_bishops.
- Eutherios_of_Tyana wikiPageWikiLink Category:Christology.
- Eutherios_of_Tyana wikiPageWikiLink Category:Patristics.
- Eutherios_of_Tyana wikiPageWikiLink Christological.
- Eutherios_of_Tyana wikiPageWikiLink Christology.
- Eutherios_of_Tyana wikiPageWikiLink Christotokos.
- Eutherios_of_Tyana wikiPageWikiLink Clavis_Patrum_Graecorum.
- Eutherios_of_Tyana wikiPageWikiLink Collectio_Casinensis.
- Eutherios_of_Tyana wikiPageWikiLink Comes.
- Eutherios_of_Tyana wikiPageWikiLink Cyril_of_Alexandria.
- Eutherios_of_Tyana wikiPageWikiLink Deicide.
- Eutherios_of_Tyana wikiPageWikiLink Diatribe_(rhetoric).
- Eutherios_of_Tyana wikiPageWikiLink Domnus.
- Eutherios_of_Tyana wikiPageWikiLink Domnus_II_of_Antioch.
- Eutherios_of_Tyana wikiPageWikiLink Ecumenical_council.
- Eutherios_of_Tyana wikiPageWikiLink Ephesus.
- Eutherios_of_Tyana wikiPageWikiLink Helladius_of_Tarsus.
- Eutherios_of_Tyana wikiPageWikiLink Irenaeus.
- Eutherios_of_Tyana wikiPageWikiLink John_Chrysostom.
- Eutherios_of_Tyana wikiPageWikiLink John_of_Antioch.
- Eutherios_of_Tyana wikiPageWikiLink Nestorius.
- Eutherios_of_Tyana wikiPageWikiLink Niğde.
- Eutherios_of_Tyana wikiPageWikiLink Oecumenical_Council.
- Eutherios_of_Tyana wikiPageWikiLink Palestine_(region).
- Eutherios_of_Tyana wikiPageWikiLink Photios_I_of_Constantinople.
- Eutherios_of_Tyana wikiPageWikiLink Photius.
- Eutherios_of_Tyana wikiPageWikiLink Pope_Sixtus_III.
- Eutherios_of_Tyana wikiPageWikiLink Severus_of_Antioch.
- Eutherios_of_Tyana wikiPageWikiLink Sixtus_III.
- Eutherios_of_Tyana wikiPageWikiLink Theodore_of_Mopsuestia.
- Eutherios_of_Tyana wikiPageWikiLink Theodoret.
- Eutherios_of_Tyana wikiPageWikiLink Theodosius_II.
- Eutherios_of_Tyana wikiPageWikiLink Theopaschism.
- Eutherios_of_Tyana wikiPageWikiLink Theotokos.
- Eutherios_of_Tyana wikiPageWikiLink Turkey.
- Eutherios_of_Tyana wikiPageWikiLink Tyana.
- Eutherios_of_Tyana hasPhotoCollection Eutherios_of_Tyana.
- Eutherios_of_Tyana wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:No_footnotes.
- Eutherios_of_Tyana subject Category:5th-century_bishops.
- Eutherios_of_Tyana subject Category:Christology.
- Eutherios_of_Tyana subject Category:Patristics.
- Eutherios_of_Tyana comment "Eutherius of Tyana, metropolitan bishop of Tyana (site near Niğde, Turkey) in Cappadocia II, features in the context of the 3rd Oecumenical Council (431) at Ephesus, where he belonged to the eastern delegation led by John of Antioch.".
- Eutherios_of_Tyana label "Eutherios of Tyana".
- Eutherios_of_Tyana sameAs m.0105sd67.
- Eutherios_of_Tyana sameAs Q16206174.
- Eutherios_of_Tyana sameAs Q16206174.
- Eutherios_of_Tyana wasDerivedFrom Eutherios_of_Tyana?oldid=680353674.
- Eutherios_of_Tyana isPrimaryTopicOf Eutherios_of_Tyana.