Stope
Puritan Board Sophomore
A question for my Historian friends:
I always kind of assumed that the Arians, after Nicea, were just a small remnant and of those they were just a few scholastic types, however I came across something this morning that the author said in passing that for several hundred years the Visigoths in Spain were Arians... It caused me a few questions:
1. Did these, or any other Arians, through the centuries write any Theological books? The reason I ask is because it would be interesting to see how their Arian views shape the rest of their Theology.
2. I always kind of thought there were the Catholic/Nicene faith and the Orthodox (prior to the Reformation), but were there other sizeable strands/branches (or even heretical)of Christianity? If so, who were they?
I always kind of assumed that the Arians, after Nicea, were just a small remnant and of those they were just a few scholastic types, however I came across something this morning that the author said in passing that for several hundred years the Visigoths in Spain were Arians... It caused me a few questions:
1. Did these, or any other Arians, through the centuries write any Theological books? The reason I ask is because it would be interesting to see how their Arian views shape the rest of their Theology.
2. I always kind of thought there were the Catholic/Nicene faith and the Orthodox (prior to the Reformation), but were there other sizeable strands/branches (or even heretical)of Christianity? If so, who were they?