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  1. Eusebius demonstrates his first claim with the help of the argument from antiquity and the evidence of moral superiority over the polytheistic religions. He answers his question in part 2 with a reference to Christian universalism vs. Jewish particularism and with the 'proof' that OT passages and prophecies all refer to Christ and were ...

  2. Eusebius of Caesarea , (flourished 4th century, Caesarea Palestinae, Palestine), Bishop and historian of early Christianity. Baptized and ordained at Caesarea in Palestine, he may have been imprisoned during the Roman persecutions. His fame rests on his Ecclesiastical History (312–324), which preserves portions of works no longer extant.

  3. www.ewtn.com › library › eusebius-of-caesarea-6331Eusebius of Caesarea | EWTN

    Eusebius is known above all as the first historian of Christianity, but he was also the greatest philologist of the ancient Church. It was to Caesarea, where Eusebius was born probably in about the year 260 A.D., that Origen had fled from Alexandria.

  4. Dec 17, 2021 · 86 Podskalsky, Byzantinische Reichseschatologie, 35–36, discusses these fragments, and indeed, Podskalsky can only reconcile them with his reading of Eusebius's Tricennial Oration by claiming that when Eusebius spoke of the Roman Empire as the fourth kingdom he meant the pagan empire of the past, whereas Eusebius accepted the Christian empire ...

  5. Regarding Eusebius and the New Testament canon, we will use the well-known passage in his Ecclesiastical History (3.25.1-7) . We also use an earlier passage (3.3.5-7) in the same book regarding the Epistle to the Hebrews and Shepherd of Hermas , where both are classified as 'disputed'. In the absence of any official list of the canonical ...

  6. Eusebius of Nicomedia (died c. 342) was an important 4th-century Eastern church bishop who was one of the key proponents of Arianism (the doctrine that Jesus Christ is not of the same substance as God) and who eventually became the leader of an Arian group called the Eusebians. Eusebius may have met Arius, the Alexandrian priest and originator ...

  7. About this page. Source. Translated by Arthur Cushman McGiffert. From Nicene and Post-Nicene Fathers, Second Series, Vol. 1. Edited by Philip Schaff and Henry Wace. (Buffalo, NY: Christian Literature Publishing Co., 1890.

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