Apocatastasis

From OrthodoxWiki
Jump to: navigation, search

Also spelled "Apokatastasis."

This article or section is a stub (i.e., in need of additional material). You can help OrthodoxWiki by expanding it.


History

Origen

St. Augustine wrote:
"I am aware that I now have to engage in a debate, devoid of rancour, those compassionate Christians who refuse to believe that the punishment of hell will be everlasting either in the case of all those men whom the completely just Judge accounts deserving of that chastisement, or at least in the case of some of them; they hold that they are to be set free after fixed limits of time have been passed, the periods being longer or shorter in proportion to the magnitude offences. On this subject tqg most compassionate of all was Origen. who believed that the Devil himselt and his angels will be rescued from their torments and brought into the company of the holy angels, after the more severe and more lasting chastisements appropriate to their deserts. But the Church has rejected Origen's teaching, and not without good reason, on account of this opinion and a number of other...
"Very different, however, is the error, promoted by tenderness of heart and human compassion, of those who suppose that the miseries of those condemned by that judgement will be temporal, whereas the felicity of all men, who are released after a shorter or longer period, will be everlasting. Now if this opinion is good and true, just because it is compassionate, then it will be the better and the truer the more compassionate it is. Then let the fountain of compassion be deepened and enlarged until it extends as far as the evil angels, who must be set free, although, of course, after many ages, and ages of any length that can be imagined! ...For all that, his error would manifestly surpass all errors in its perversity, its wrong-headed contradiction of the express words of God,by the same margin as, in his own estimation, his belief surpasses all other opinions in its clemency."
- St. Augustine of Hippo, City of God 21.17 (trans. Bettenson)

Clement of Alexandria

===Isaac of Nineveh===(===Isaac of Syria===)

Gregory of Nyssa

Gregory the Great

Maximus the Confessor

Modern Advocates

Known proponenents of a qualified doctrine of apocatastasis within the Orthodox Church include:

Some prominent 20th c. non-Orthodox theologians who advocated this include:

Other articles of interest