Greek philosophy, John's gospel and Philo of Alexandria were merged at Council of Nicaea in 325 AD - William Lane Craig & approvedofGod

   12:38
Uploaded: 01 Apr 2019   (7 years ago)  ·  Shared: 02 Apr 2019
Watch on Youtube

Video Description (from Youtube)

Why do Trinitarian scholars, theologians, and historians act extremely ignorant when it comes to Philo of Alexandria's influence on Western theology? It is because many of them are ignorant. They have not done deep research into this matter. Some are comfortable in what they believe and are not willing to study something that contradicts their theology.

DISCLAIMER
All videos are shared for educational and information purposes only. All videos are hosted and viewable on Youtube servers. Video titles are generated using the original video title; overall content theme including actual dialogue and speech (Transcript); and A.I-based recommendations with a focus on SEO, keyword density, and internal search functions. The video title does not represent the views held by the Youtube video uploader, or any individual, organisation or business.

If you spot any mistake, omission or give feedback, kindly Contact Us with details.




Articles with 'Nicaea' (3)

1.   Council of Nicaea 325 AD The Council of Nicaea under Emperor Constantine played a crucial role in determining the fundamental Christian beliefs
23423 views · 6 hrs ago
2.   Nicene Creed - Council of Nicaea 325 AD The Nicene Creed is a Symbol of faith widely used in Christian liturgy. It is called Nicene because it was originally adopted in the city of Nicaea (present day Iznik, Turkey) by the First Council of Nicaea in 325 AD.
23154 views · 15 hrs ago
3.   Constantine, Nicaea and History The Christianity we know today is a result of what men agreed at the Council of Nicaea in 325 AD
21794 views · 7 hrs ago

Videos on 'Nicaea' (28)

Video: At Council of Nicaea 325 AD, Arian, Orthodox and Eusebians debated Jesus' divinity - InspiringPhilosophy 9:30
711 views · 20 hrs ago | 10 years ago
1 of 28   
Video: The Council of Nicaea, Arian and Athanasian Creed 8:06
526 views · 3 days ago | 9 years ago
2 of 28   
Video: Arian Controversy and the Council of Nicaea - Khan Academy 11:24
409 views · 6 hrs ago | 9 years ago
3 of 28   
Video: Serapis Christus, Ptolemy and how Constantine created Jesus Christ at the Council of Nicaea - Ray Hagins 51:30
927 views · 17 hrs ago | 9 years ago
4 of 28   
Video: At Nicaea, Serapis Christus finally became Jesus Christ 4:46
543 views · 1 day ago | 9 years ago
5 of 28   
Video: Early Christianity: Arius, Athanasius and Nicaea - Ryan Reeves 32:34
1002 views · 3 days ago | 9 years ago
6 of 28   
Video: After the Council of Nicaea - Ryan Reeves 27:05
617 views · 2 days ago | 9 years ago
7 of 28   
Video: Arius, Athanasius & Constantine at Nicaea: Who won the debate? - Richard Rubenstein 55:53
783 views · 2 days ago | 9 years ago
8 of 28   
Video: In 325 AD, Trinity became Official Church Doctrine at Council of Nicaea - Tovia Singer 50:14
809 views · 9 hrs ago | 8 years ago
9 of 28   
Video: In 325 AD, Council of Nicaea created Jesus and Christianity by unifying pagan Gods and beliefs - Doug Michael 1:51
934 views · 3 days ago | 8 years ago
10 of 28   
Video: Arguing Bishops at Council of Nicaea voted Pagan rituals into Christianity i.e. Trinity - Doug Michael 2:10
1201 views · 2 hrs ago | 8 years ago
11 of 28   
Video: In 325 AD, Council of Nicaea debated and voted on divinity of Jesus - Bart Ehrman 2:00
551 views · 14 hrs ago | 8 years ago
12 of 28   
Video: At Nicaea 325 AD, Jesus was declared co-equal, co-substantial, co-eternal with God - Charles Hedrick 1:52
261 views · 5 days ago | 8 years ago
13 of 28   
Video: After Nicaea 325 AD, Constantine had Eusebius determine the earliest New Testament canon - Charles Hedrick 1:48
763 views · 3 hrs ago | 8 years ago
14 of 28   
Video: Christianity did not exist until AFTER the Council of Nicaea (325 AD) - Charles Hedrick 1:46
873 views · 16 hrs ago | 8 years ago
15 of 28   
Video: Council of Nicaea (325 AD) ignored earlier writings on Jesus' divinity in the Gospels - Charles Hedrick 0:56
716 views · 4 hrs ago | 8 years ago
16 of 28   
Video: In 325 AD, Council of Nicaea decided the final Christian doctrine - Lorence Yufa | Milwaukee Atheists 1:50
787 views · 4 days ago | 8 years ago
17 of 28   
Video: At Nicaea (325 AD), Arian Controversy was settled; a 'disadvantaged' Arius defeated - Richard Rubenstein 5:56
479 views · 2 days ago | 8 years ago
18 of 28   
Video: Council of Nicaea (325 AD) - Jim Papandrea 1:02:30
464 views · 1 day ago | 8 years ago
19 of 28   
Video: Nicene Creed (Nicaea) - Jim Papandrea 1:06:39
445 views · 11 hrs ago | 8 years ago
20 of 28   
Video: Nobody believed Jesus was God, until the Council of Nicaea in 325 AD - Michael Skobac 9:15
660 views · 3 days ago | 8 years ago
21 of 28   
Video: What Happened at the Council of Nicaea? - Milwaukee Atheists 18:25
664 views · 13 hrs ago | 8 years ago
22 of 28   
Video: Greek Philosophy won at Council of Nicaea. The Bible lost - Richard Rubenstein 5:21
804 views · 2 days ago | 7 years ago
23 of 28   
Video: Greek philosophy, John's gospel and Philo of Alexandria were merged at Council of Nicaea in 325 AD - William Lane Craig & approvedofGod 12:38
1004 views · 16 hrs ago | 7 years ago
24 of 28   
Video: In 325 AD, the Council of Nicaea defined Jesus as 'Homoousios', of same substance with God - Kegan Chandler 1:00:25
527 views · 2 days ago | 7 years ago
25 of 28   
Video: In 325 AD, the Council of Nicaea defined Jesus as 'Homoousios', of same substance with God - Kegan Chandler 3:04
661 views · 4 hrs ago | 7 years ago
26 of 28   
Video: In 325 AD, the Council of Nicaea defined Jesus as 'Homoousios', of same substance with God - Kegan Chandler 2:14
916 views · 2 hrs ago | 7 years ago
27 of 28   
Video: In 325 AD, the Council of Nicaea defined Jesus as 'Homoousios', of same substance with God - Kegan Chandler 4:24
836 views · 1 day ago | 7 years ago
28 of 28   

TEXT SEARCH | VIDEO • NEWS • ARTICLE

About  |  Help  |  Contact    •    Terms  |  Privacy  |  Disclaimer
Connect:      Facebook  |    Twitter  |    Youtube