4.8 • 729 Ratings
🗓️ 29 May 2025
⏱️ 37 minutes
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Fr. Andrew Hofer explores the earliest Christological debates of the first centuries, showing how heresies like Arianism, Nestorianism, and Pelagianism threatened the Church’s understanding of Jesus’ true identity, and why defending orthodox Christology remains vital for Christian faith and unity today.
This lecture was given on February 16th, 2024, at St. Joseph's in Greenwich Village.
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About the Speaker:
Fr. Andrew Hofer, O.P., (Ph.D. Notre Dame) is professor of patristics and ancient languages at the Pontifical Faculty of the Dominican House of Studies where he serves as the director of the doctoral program. He authored Christ in the Life and Teaching of Gregory of Nazianzus (Oxford University Press, 2013) and The Power of Patristic Preaching: The Word in Our Flesh (Catholic University of America, 2023). He co-authored A Living Sacrifice: Guidance for Men Discerning Religious Life (Vianney Vocations, 2019). Editor-in-chief of the academic journal The Thomist, Hofer is editor or co-editor of several volumes including The Oxford Handbook of Deification, The Cambridge Companion to Augustine's Sermons, and Thomas Aquinas and the Greek Fathers. He enjoys speaking with students about their theological and spiritual questions.
Keywords: Arianism, Christological Debates, Early Church Heresies, Nestorianism, Orthodox Christology, Pelagianism, Thomas Aquinas, Unity of the Church, Fides et Ratio
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0:00.0 | Welcome to the Tomistic Institute podcast. |
0:06.0 | Our mission is to promote the Catholic intellectual tradition in the university, the church, and the wider public square. |
0:13.0 | The lectures on this podcast are organized by university students at Temistic Institute chapters around the world. |
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0:22.5 | to mystic institute.org. I'd like for us to begin with a passage from Matthew chapter 10. So Matthew |
0:29.2 | chapter 10 and a prayer. Do not think that I have come to bring peace upon the earth. I have come to bring not peace, |
0:39.5 | but the sword. For I have come to set a man against his father, a daughter against her mother, |
0:44.6 | and a daughter-in-law against her mother-in-law, and one's enemies will be those of his household. |
0:49.2 | Let us pray. Almighty God, we thank you for the sword that Jesus brings, the sword that divides us from all that is not of him. |
1:01.8 | We ask you now to pour forth your Holy Spirit upon us that we may understand more the great mystery of your son, Jesus Christ. |
1:13.5 | We make this prayer in his name, and we pray as he taught. |
1:17.8 | Our Father, you are from heaven. |
1:20.3 | Hallelujah be thy name. |
1:22.1 | My kingdom come. |
1:23.6 | I will be done. |
1:25.1 | Honor it fast is in heaven. |
1:27.2 | Give us to stay our daily bread |
1:29.2 | and forgive us for our trespasses. |
1:32.0 | As we forgive those |
1:33.4 | who trespass against us |
1:34.9 | and leave us not to temptation |
1:37.2 | but deliver us from evil. |
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