Logos-Sarx-Christology

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Logos-Sarx-Christology is a meaning Word-Flesh-Christology. It uses to explain incarnation(Man) of the Son of God(Word)[1] This means that Jesus Christ became a human. Apollinaris of Laodicaea insisted on this doctrine.[2] This doctrine derived the concept from John 1:14 “The Word became flesh”(ho logos sarx egeneto, ὁ λόγος σὰρξ ἐγένετο). It is especially significant that the chief schema of the Athanasian interpretation of Christ recurs, the schema which as become the basic expression of the whole Logos-sarx christology of all types: The Word(Logos) became human(σὰρξ) and did not come into human body(σῶμα). Cyril has the two frameworks which were to give a first, unconsidered explanation of the relationship between God and human in Christ, the frameworks of ‘indwelling’ and ‘appropriation.’ The Word is ‘in’ the body and the body is ‘appropriated’ by the Word. [3] Karl Barth also insisted on this doctrine.

See also

References

  1. ^ Geoffrey Dunn & Wendy Mayer, Christians Shaping Identity from the Roman Empire to Byzantium: Studies Inspired by Paulin Allen (Brill:Leiden, 2015), p. 416
  2. ^ Christoph von Schönborn, God Sent His Son: A Contemporary Christology (Ignatius Press: San Francisco, 2004), p. 133
  3. ^ The Younger Cyril and the “Logos-Sarx” Christology