
Cerinthus - Wikipedia
Cerinthus (Greek: Κήρινθος, romanized: Kērinthos; fl. c. 50-100 CE) was an early Gnostic, who was prominent as a heresiarch in the view of the early Church Fathers. [1] Contrary to the …
Cerinthus | Gnostic, Gnosticism, Christian | Britannica
Cerinthus (flourished c. ad 100) was a Christian heretic whose errors, according to the theologian Irenaeus, led the apostle John to write his New Testament Gospel.
Cerinthus - Encyclopedia of The Bible - Bible Gateway
Cerinthus was a Jew by race and religion. He studied in Alexandria, appeared in Pal., and was most active in western Asia Minor, spreading his false teaching about the person of Christ.
The Sage Cerinthus - Early Christian History
Discussion of the life and teachings of the Sage Cerinthus, including its Gnostic and non-Gnostic elements.
Cerenthus, opponent of St. John - Christian Classics Ethereal Library
Cerinthus, a traditional opponent of St. John. It will probably always remain an open question whether his fundamentally Ebionite sympathies inclined him to accept Jewish rather than …
Cerinthus, founder of early heretical Christian sect (fl. c. 100 AD)
CERINTHUS was the founder of one of the earliest heretical sects of the Christians. He was brought up in Egypt (Theod. Hcer. Fab. ii. 3), but removed to Asia Minor, where he propagated …
CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA: Cerinthus - NEW ADVENT
Cerinthus distinguished between Jesus and Christ. Jesus was mere man, though eminent in holiness. He suffered and died and was raised from the dead, or, as some say Cerinthus …
Cerinthus - Biblical Cyclopedia
Cerinthus (Κήρινθος), a heresiarch, who lived in the time of the apostle John, towards the end of the first and at the beginning of the second century. The accounts of the ancients and the …
Cerinthus | Catholic Answers Encyclopedia
Cerinthus (Gr. K?rinthos), a Gnostic-Ebionite heretic, contemporary with St. John; against whose errors on the divinity of Christ the Apostle is said to have written the Fourth Gospel. We …
Cerinthus - Encyclopedia Volume - Catholic Online
Cerinthus's doctrines were a strange mixture of Gnosticism, Judaism, Chiliasm, and Ebionitism. He admitted one Supreme Being; but the world was produced by a distinct and far inferior …