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  1. www.wikipedia.orgWikipedia

    Wikipedia is a free online encyclopedia, created and edited by volunteers around the world and hosted by the Wikimedia Foundation.

  2. Terri. Website. www .mikeaquilina .com. Mike Aquilina is an American Catholic author and journalist working in the area of Church history, especially patristics. [1] He is co-founder of the St. Paul Center for Biblical Theology, a Catholic research center based in Steubenville, Ohio. [2] [3]

  3. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Sara_ParvisSara Parvis - Wikipedia

    Sara Parvis is a British Patristic scholar and Senior Lecturer in Patristics at the University of Edinburgh. She is known for her works on early Christianity. Books. Marcellus of Ancyra and the lost years of the Arian controversy, 325–345, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2006.

  4. Patristics – the study of early Christianity in the period stretching from the end of the New Testament to the early Middle Ages – is a foundational discipline for theology. It studies the time in which Christianity as we now know it was formed. First, and most importantly, the canon of Scripture was established as the focus for every ...

  5. Patristics is the study of the writings and teachings of some of the most consequential thinkers in the early Church—even if not all of them were “Fathers.”. But a few qualifications are in order. Let’s clarify the meaning of patristics. 1. “Fathers” is a spiritual title. The Fathers of the Church are spiritual fathers.

  6. v. t. e. Eastern Orthodoxy, otherwise known as Eastern Orthodox Christianity or Byzantine Christianity, [1] is one of the three main branches of Chalcedonian Christianity, alongside Roman Catholicism and Protestantism. [2] [3] Like the Pentarchy of the first millennium, the mainstream (or "canonical") Eastern Orthodox Church is organised into ...

  7. e. In the Catholic Church, the Dicastery for the Causes of Saints, previously named the Congregation for the Causes of Saints ( Latin: Congregatio de Causis Sanctorum ), is the dicastery of the Roman Curia that oversees the complex process that leads to the canonization of saints, passing through the steps of a declaration of "heroic virtues ...

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