Human dignity and deification visions of the Greek Church Fathers

There are various testimonies of Patristic and later Orthodox theological tradition to clarify the main meaning of human dignity, although the very term usually does not appear in a form that would seem familiar to a contemporary audience. Generally speaking, if the term is being addressed at all, i...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autor principal: Mikhaĭlov, P. B. aut (Autor)
Formato: Artículo
Idioma:Inglés
Ver en Red de Bibliotecas de la Archidiócesis de Granada:https://catalogo.redbagranada.es/cgi-bin/koha/opac-detail.pl?biblionumber=505815
Descripción
Sumario:There are various testimonies of Patristic and later Orthodox theological tradition to clarify the main meaning of human dignity, although the very term usually does not appear in a form that would seem familiar to a contemporary audience. Generally speaking, if the term is being addressed at all, it is understood as a final goal of human existence — through the human person’s achievement of a narrow participation in God. In all these accounts, the category of relatedness between humans and the divine creator has a central significance. A comparative study of explications concerning different aspects of the one phenomenon of God’s manifestation, together with the genuine experience of human salvation reveals both a variety and certain continuity in the Christian doctrine of salvation. These various explications use a terminology of value and virtue, in application of a peculiar metaphor of the human soul as a mirror and in formation of general soteriological conception of deification [θέωσις]. The image of a mirror, reflecting the actual state of inner development of the human soul, appears to be of central importance in this context.