Alexander of Alexandria: Difference between revisions
m (stripping wikipediainfo in preparation for moving all to the top of the page) |
m (Bot: Cosmetic changes) |
||
(5 intermediate revisions by 3 users not shown) | |||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
'''{{PAGENAME}}''' was [[Athanasius]]' superior, and what Emperor [[Constantine I|Constantine]] called "one of the loudest voices" in the debate over the nature of [[Jesus Christ|Christ]]'s divinity — a debate eventually settled at the [[Council of Nicaea]]. He so regularly sent letters currying Constantine's favour that they essentially backfired. | {{wikipediainfo|Pope Alexander I of Alexandria}} | ||
'''{{PAGENAME}}''' was [[Athanasius]]' superior, and what Emperor [[Constantine I|Constantine]] called "one of the loudest voices" in the debate over the nature of [[Jesus Christ|Christ]]'s divinity — a debate eventually settled at the [[Council of Nicaea]] in [[325]]. He so regularly sent letters currying Constantine's favour that they essentially backfired. By the time the Council sat, the Emperor simply wished the matter settled, and accused Alexander of simply keeping the arguments going rather than trying to find a way to heal the rift and keep the [[Roman Empire]] together. ([[AUDIO]]: ''[[The Council of Nicaea (audio story)|The Council of Nicaea]]'') | |||
== Behind the scenes == | == Behind the scenes == | ||
Alexander doesn't appear in ''[[The Council of Nicaea (audio story)|The Council of Nicaea]]'', but is instead a major offstage presence. | Alexander doesn't appear in ''[[The Council of Nicaea (audio story)|The Council of Nicaea]]'', but is instead a major offstage presence. | ||
[[Category:Council of Nicaea participants]] | [[Category:Council of Nicaea participants]] | ||
[[Category:Religious leaders from the real world]] | [[Category:Religious leaders from the real world]] |
Latest revision as of 04:39, 26 February 2019
Alexander of Alexandria was Athanasius' superior, and what Emperor Constantine called "one of the loudest voices" in the debate over the nature of Christ's divinity — a debate eventually settled at the Council of Nicaea in 325. He so regularly sent letters currying Constantine's favour that they essentially backfired. By the time the Council sat, the Emperor simply wished the matter settled, and accused Alexander of simply keeping the arguments going rather than trying to find a way to heal the rift and keep the Roman Empire together. (AUDIO: The Council of Nicaea)
Behind the scenes[[edit] | [edit source]]
Alexander doesn't appear in The Council of Nicaea, but is instead a major offstage presence.