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Ciało zmartwychwstałe w nauczaniu Ojców Apostolskich i św. Justyna

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dc.contributor.author Szram, Mariusz
dc.date.accessioned 2024-02-06T11:16:59Z
dc.date.available 2024-02-06T11:16:59Z
dc.date.issued 2009
dc.identifier.citation Roczniki Historii Kościoła, 2009, T. 1(56), s. 5-31. pl_PL
dc.identifier.issn 2080-8526
dc.identifier.uri http://repozytorium.theo-logos.pl/xmlui/handle/123456789/12876
dc.description Autor tłumaczenia streszczenia / Summary translated by Tadeusz Karłowicz. pl_PL
dc.description.abstract The article presents the teaching about the resurrected body in the 2nd century A. D. (Apostolic Fathers, Justin, Pseudo-Justin), up to the moment of the appearance of the first treatises devoted exclusively to resurrection; they were written by Athenagoras, Tertulian or Origen at the break of the 2nd century. On the basis of analysis of source texts the author puts forth the following theses: 1. The conviction about Christ’s resurrection was transmitted as one of the main truths of faith that prophesized raising of the dead, although the argument also appeared that referred to the Incarnation of Logos as the event giving the human body exceptional dignity, as well as stressed the role of God the Father as the Author of the new creature in the ultimate times. 2. Universality of resurrection as an act preceding the last judgment did not raise doubts in the authors of that period; however, they stressed rather the theological meaning and the salutary context of resurrection – that is, they understood it in the strict sense as the fact that just people will gain a new life in its fullness. 3. In some authors, especially in St Justin, the millenary context can be seen, suggesting the existence of resurrection for the just, who will live in a thousand-year kingdom that will still be an earthly, but already renewed one; this resurrection will be supplemented by the fact that people will gain new features, proper for eternal life, which can be received only after bringing back to life all the remaining people deserving eternal punishment in ultimate times. 4. In the discussed period spiritual understanding of resurrection was important. It was believed that in fact it begins with the baptism, and in ultimate times it only will be confirmed and supplemented by returning to human bodies. Moral conditions for receiving the new full life were important. Only those ones would attain it who would ‘keep their bodies chaste’; that is who would be faithful in their earthly lives to the grace received at the baptism. 5. The authors writing in that period were not particularly interested in anthropology. From the middle of the 2nd century the dualism of Hellenic origin was in fact typical. It emphasized that man consists of an immortal soul and a mortal body; however, this relation is not commented on so widely as in later apologetic writings. 6. Christian authors of the first two centuries A. D. most often used the phrase “ἀνάστασις νεκρων” for describing resurrection, and when they meant the resurrected body they more frequently used the term “σάρξ” than “σωμα”, although these terms had similar meanings and they were used interchangeably. 7. Authors of that period did not consider the features of the resurrected body in detail. First of all they emphasized its immortality (ἀθανασία) and imperishableness (ἀϕθαρσία). 8. Most works coming from the discussed period contain criticism of the doketistic views or ones rejecting resurrection, which proves that from the very beginning there was a current in the Church that questioned the possibility that the human body could return to life. pl_PL
dc.description.sponsorship Katolicki Uniwersytet Lubelski Jana Pawła II pl_PL
dc.language.iso pl pl_PL
dc.publisher Towarzystwo Naukowe KUL pl_PL
dc.rights Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Poland *
dc.rights.uri http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/pl/ *
dc.subject ciało pl_PL
dc.subject zmartwychwstanie pl_PL
dc.subject eschatologia pl_PL
dc.subject antropologia pl_PL
dc.subject Ojcowie Apostolscy pl_PL
dc.subject apologeci wczesnochrześcijańscy pl_PL
dc.subject apologeci pl_PL
dc.subject wczesne chrześcijaństwo pl_PL
dc.subject ciało zmartwychwstałe pl_PL
dc.subject Justyn Męczennik pl_PL
dc.subject święci pl_PL
dc.subject literatura patrystyczna pl_PL
dc.subject patrystyka pl_PL
dc.subject patrologia pl_PL
dc.subject chrześcijaństwo pl_PL
dc.subject body pl_PL
dc.subject resurrection pl_PL
dc.subject eschatology pl_PL
dc.subject anthropology pl_PL
dc.subject Apostolic Fathers pl_PL
dc.subject early-Christian apologists pl_PL
dc.subject apologists pl_PL
dc.subject early Christianity pl_PL
dc.subject resurrected body pl_PL
dc.subject Justin Martyr pl_PL
dc.subject saints pl_PL
dc.subject patristic literature pl_PL
dc.subject patristics pl_PL
dc.subject patrology pl_PL
dc.subject Christianity pl_PL
dc.subject literatura pl_PL
dc.subject literature pl_PL
dc.title Ciało zmartwychwstałe w nauczaniu Ojców Apostolskich i św. Justyna pl_PL
dc.title.alternative The Resurrected Body in the Teachings of Apostolic Fathers and of St Justin pl_PL
dc.type Article pl_PL


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