Thank you,very much on this work on early church fathers, even those that are not generally known,and whose name and work is missing out in today's church history and study,when the modern church want to suppress and close up those salient ideology,so has been distorted. Great work,please keep it up, I'm a follower of your podcast.
I really like your stuff. I read this passage from St. Paul's letter to the Philippians every Christmas morning and Easter morning with my family. I'd like to try to promote your stuff. Would you ever consider doing a podcast episode on my channel? I'd love to go over a break down of this passage, looking at the understanding of novation compared to the Arian and nestorian views. This topic or an episode looking at the church fathers view on mortal vs venial sin. Let me know. Keep up the good work
Hey, I am so sorry I only just saw this comment - sometimes they get lost in the mix on TH-cam as you know. Thank you so much for this offer - we really appreciate the help promoting our work - and yes, Jim would love to come on your show and talk about whatever you want. You can contact him at jim at papandrea dot net.
Since he was a heretic, I'd assume the problem is that at that point he wasn't being martyred for the true faith. Unlike St. Hippolytus, who had been an anti-pope but then reconciled with the true pope (St. Pontian) and they were both martyred together.
An absolutely great explanation of the Trinity and the natures of Christ.
I have trouble seeing the difference between subordination and the order of the persons God, but your video helped to explain it.
Thank you,very much on this work on early church fathers, even those that are not generally known,and whose name and work is missing out in today's church history and study,when the modern church want to suppress and close up those salient ideology,so has been distorted. Great work,please keep it up, I'm a follower of your podcast.
Extremely informative and helpful
This was the missing link for me. Extremely important father before Nicaea
I really like your stuff. I read this passage from St. Paul's letter to the Philippians every Christmas morning and Easter morning with my family. I'd like to try to promote your stuff. Would you ever consider doing a podcast episode on my channel? I'd love to go over a break down of this passage, looking at the understanding of novation compared to the Arian and nestorian views. This topic or an episode looking at the church fathers view on mortal vs venial sin. Let me know. Keep up the good work
Hey, I am so sorry I only just saw this comment - sometimes they get lost in the mix on TH-cam as you know. Thank you so much for this offer - we really appreciate the help promoting our work - and yes, Jim would love to come on your show and talk about whatever you want. You can contact him at jim at papandrea dot net.
I thought martyrdom was the "fast track" to sainthood.
It depends on who was martyred and what they believed.
Since he was a heretic, I'd assume the problem is that at that point he wasn't being martyred for the true faith. Unlike St. Hippolytus, who had been an anti-pope but then reconciled with the true pope (St. Pontian) and they were both martyred together.
@@CatholicCulturePod ahh, food for thought.