Characteristics of the Church’s Condemnation of Origen’s Idea of Apocatastasis in the 3rd-6th Centuries

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This article examines the attitude toward the idea of apocatastasis in the context of the “Origenist” controversies at the ecclesiastical level during the first three centuries after Origen’s death. A distinctive feature of this historical period in the Church’s life is the formation of church dogmas against the backdrop of heterodox and heretical beliefs. The condemnation of apocatastasis marked the culmination of a long struggle against “Origenism,” in which the tradition of confessing the presence of eternal fire in the eschaton prevailed at the doctrinal level. However, no high-quality theological treatment of this topic followed. This process demonstrated that the Church at that time was more concerned with the moral and practical consequences of “Origenism,” in particular the idea of apocatastasis, than with its logical theological coherence or philosophical appeal.

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Apocatastasis, eschatology, Origenism, universalism, anathemas of the Fifth Ecumenical Council

Короткий адрес: https://sciup.org/140313010

IDR: 140313010   |   УДК: 27-9:27-872   |   DOI: 10.47132/2541-9587_2025_4_117