Disambiguation evidence for Patripassianism (teaching that the Father suffered on the cross) via surface form

"Patripassianism"


As subject (47)

Triples where this entity appears as subject under the label "Patripassianism".

Predicate Object
addressesQuestion how divine unity relates to the persons of the Trinity
addressesQuestion whether the Father can suffer
affirmsDoctrine strict unity of Father and Son
affirmsDoctrine that the one God suffered in Christ
classifiedAs heresy by mainstream Christianity
consideredErrorBy Eastern Orthodox Christianity
surface form: Eastern Orthodox Church
consideredErrorBy Roman Catholicism
surface form: Roman Catholic Church
consideredErrorBy most Protestant traditions
contradicts Nicene Christianity
surface form: Nicene Trinitarianism
contradicts doctrine of three distinct divine persons
coreClaim the Father Himself suffered and died on the cross in Christ’s crucifixion
coreClaim the Father is so closely identified with the Son that their suffering is the same event
coreClaim the Father suffered in the passion of Christ
criticizedFor confusing the persons of the Trinity
criticizedFor implying passibility of the divine nature of the Father
criticizedFor undermining the distinction between Father and Son
deniesDoctrine classical doctrine of the impassibility of God the Father
deniesDoctrine distinct personal subsistence of Father and Son in the Trinity
focusesOn divine suffering in the crucifixion
focusesOn relationship between Father and Son
geographicContext Roman Empire
geographicContext early Christian Church
hasAlternativeName Patripassian heresy
hasAlternativeName Patripassian teaching
hasAlternativeName Patripassian view
hasEtymology from Latin 'patri' (father) and 'passio' (suffering)
historicalCategory early Christian doctrinal controversy
historicalInfluenceOn later Trinitarian controversies
historicalInfluenceOn later discussions of divine impassibility
instanceOf Christological doctrine
instanceOf early Christian heresy
instanceOf nontrinitarian doctrine
instanceOf theological doctrine
instanceOf view about the Trinity
isFormOf Modalism
surface form: Modalistic Monarchianism
isFormOf Modalism
surface form: Monarchianism
isRelatedTo Modalism
isRelatedTo Modalism
surface form: Nontrinitarianism
isRelatedTo Sabellianism
opposedBy Saint Hippolytus
surface form: Hippolytus of Rome
opposedBy Tertullian
opposedBy proto-orthodox Christian theologians
timePeriod 2nd century
timePeriod 3rd century
viewOfCrucifixion the Father was crucified in the Son
viewOfFather Father is numerically identical with the Son in the incarnation
viewOfSon Son is not a distinct person from the Father

As object (1)

Triples where some other subject referred to this entity as "Patripassianism".