Description Of Heresy | Heresy | % Correct |
---|---|---|
Denial of the true divinity of Jesus Christ taking various specific forms, but all agreed that Jesus Christ was created by the Father, that he had a beginning in time, and that the title "Son of God" was a courtesy one. | Arianism | 79%
|
The belief that icons are idols and should be destroyed. | Iconoclasm | 50%
|
Belief that Jesus Christ was a natural union between the Flesh and the Word, thus not identical, to the divine Son of God. | Nestorianism | 50%
|
Belief that Jesus was born as a mere (non-divine) man, was supremely virtuous and that he was adopted later as "Son of God" by the descent of the Spirit on him. | Adoptionism | 25%
|
Belief that Jesus' physical body was an illusion and as such did not really die on the cross. | Docetism | 17%
|
Religious movement that believes in a "Godhead" of separate and distinct beings: Father, Son, and Holy Spirit, as well as a Heavenly Mother. Further, it is believed that all humans as children of God can become exalted, or in other words, "As man now is God once was: As God now is, man may be." | Mormonism | 17%
|
Belief that the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit are three characterizations of one God, rather than three distinct "persons" in one God. | Sabellianism | 8%
|
Any view which holds that Christians are freed by grace from obligations of any moral law. | Antinomianism | 4%
|
Belief that Jesus Christ had two natures but only one will. | Monothelitism | 4%
|
Belief that the Father and Son are not two distinct persons, and thus God the Father suffered on the cross as Jesus. | Patripassianism | 4%
|
Belief that the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit are three independent and distinct divine beings as opposed to three persons of one being and one essence | Tritheism | 4%
|
Belief that God has human form (anthropomorphism) and that one ought to celebrate Jesus' death during the Jewish Passover (quartodecimanism). | Audianism | 0%
|
Held all things in common, even wives and children | Barallot | 0%
|
Extreme proponents of the rule of Saint Francis of Assisi, especially with regard to poverty, and regarded the wealth of the Church as scandalous, and that of individual churchmen as invalidating their status. | Fraticelli | 0%
|
The domestic policies of Joseph II of Austria, attempting to impose a liberal ideology on the Church. | Josephinism | 0%
|
Copyright H Brothers Inc, 2008–2024
Contact Us | Go To Top | View Mobile Site