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Perichoresis In Gregory Nazianzen And Maximus The Confessor, Brian T. Scalise
Perichoresis In Gregory Nazianzen And Maximus The Confessor, Brian T. Scalise
Eleutheria: John W. Rawlings School of Divinity Academic Journal
The doctrine of perichoresis applied to Trinity is the mutual coinherence or interpentration of the Persons of the Godhead. Applied to Christology, perichoreo is, first, the reciprocal passing of characteristics and titles between the divine and human natures hypostatically united in Yeshua. Secondly, it also describes the distinct but intimate union between Christ's natures. Historically, the Trinitarian use of perichoresis grew out of the christological use of perichoreo first developed by Gregory Nazianzen (A.D. 4th century) and then, subsuquently, explained by Maximus the Confessor (A.D 7th century). Maximus, often directly commenting on Gregory's use of perichoreo, seeks to expound …