The end of early Christian adoptionism? A note on the invention of adoptionism, its sources, and its current demise

Publication date

2015

Authors

Smit, Peter BenORCID 0000-0002-7450-571XISNI 0000000078523996

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
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License

taverne

Abstract

‘Adoptionism’ is an early Christian ‘heresy’ often associated with early strands of Jewish Christian tradition. It figures as such in handbooks of church history and New Testament studies alike. This essay investigates the origins of the concept of ‘adoptionism’ in the historiography of early Christianity, offers a fresh analysis of the relevant ‘adoptionist’ sources, and concludes that the concept is a misleading one. Therefore, the proposal is made to abandon the notion of ‘adoptionism’ as a category and to focus on the authors involved as such and to investigate what their soteriological and christological concerns were, rather than to identify them as ‘adoptionists’ and to study them with that identification as a starting point.

Keywords

Adoptionism, Christology, Early Christianity, Heresy, Nicea, Taverne

Citation

Smit, P B A 2015, 'The end of early Christian adoptionism? A note on the invention of adoptionism, its sources, and its current demise', International Journal of Philosophy and Theology, vol. 76, no. 3, pp. 177-199. https://doi.org/10.1080/21692327.2015.1091981