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Join Jacobs Premium: https://www.thenathanjacobspodcast.com/membership
The book club (use code LEWIS): https://www.thenathanjacobspodcast.com/offers/aLohje7p/checkout
This is part two of a three-part series examining the philosophical commitments embedded in the seven ecumenical councils of early Christianity. In this episode, Dr. Jacobs explores the metaphysical foundations of Nicene and Constantinopolitan theology, including hyalomorphism, moderate realism, the doctrine of the hypostasis, and the distinction between creation and eternal generation. He’ll walk through how the early church fathers developed sophisticated philosophical positions on the nature of God, creatures, causation, and the individual that were integral to Christian theology rather than later Greek additions.
All the links:
Substack: https://nathanajacobs.substack.com/
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Website: https://www.nathanajacobs.com/
X: https://x.com/NathanJacobsPod
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Apple Podcast: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-nathan-jacobs-podcast
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/nathanandrewjacobs
Academia: https://vanderbilt.academia.edu/NathanAJacobs
00:00:00 Intro
00:02:15 The Seven Ecumenical Councils wverview
00:04:42 No ancient divide
00:21:42 Ancient Christians saw Christianity as philosophy
00:29:39 Dispelling the progress narrative
00:38:21 The Arian disput & metaphysical commitments
00:39:16 What it means to be "created"
00:43:12 Hylomorphism: form & matter
00:52:24 Metaphysical realism and the law of contradiction
01:03:07 Are creatures material?
01:04:38 Biblical foundations for these commitments
01:09:20 From Nicaea to Constantinople
01:11:51 The doctrine of the hypostasis
01:14:00 Moderate realism: Aristotle vs Plato
01:23:10 The individual as its own reality
01:32:15 On "Not Three Gods"
01:42:32 The distinction of causes: begotten, not made
01:51:27 Efficient vs formal cause
02:00:05 Per se vs per accidens causality
02:02:39 Eternal generation & procession
By Nathan Jacobs4.8
6060 ratings
Join Jacobs Premium: https://www.thenathanjacobspodcast.com/membership
The book club (use code LEWIS): https://www.thenathanjacobspodcast.com/offers/aLohje7p/checkout
This is part two of a three-part series examining the philosophical commitments embedded in the seven ecumenical councils of early Christianity. In this episode, Dr. Jacobs explores the metaphysical foundations of Nicene and Constantinopolitan theology, including hyalomorphism, moderate realism, the doctrine of the hypostasis, and the distinction between creation and eternal generation. He’ll walk through how the early church fathers developed sophisticated philosophical positions on the nature of God, creatures, causation, and the individual that were integral to Christian theology rather than later Greek additions.
All the links:
Substack: https://nathanajacobs.substack.com/
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/thenathanjacobspodcast
Website: https://www.nathanajacobs.com/
X: https://x.com/NathanJacobsPod
Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/0hSskUtCwDT40uFbqTk3QS
Apple Podcast: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-nathan-jacobs-podcast
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/nathanandrewjacobs
Academia: https://vanderbilt.academia.edu/NathanAJacobs
00:00:00 Intro
00:02:15 The Seven Ecumenical Councils wverview
00:04:42 No ancient divide
00:21:42 Ancient Christians saw Christianity as philosophy
00:29:39 Dispelling the progress narrative
00:38:21 The Arian disput & metaphysical commitments
00:39:16 What it means to be "created"
00:43:12 Hylomorphism: form & matter
00:52:24 Metaphysical realism and the law of contradiction
01:03:07 Are creatures material?
01:04:38 Biblical foundations for these commitments
01:09:20 From Nicaea to Constantinople
01:11:51 The doctrine of the hypostasis
01:14:00 Moderate realism: Aristotle vs Plato
01:23:10 The individual as its own reality
01:32:15 On "Not Three Gods"
01:42:32 The distinction of causes: begotten, not made
01:51:27 Efficient vs formal cause
02:00:05 Per se vs per accidens causality
02:02:39 Eternal generation & procession

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