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- Lactantius - Wikipedia
Lucius Caecilius Firmianus Lactantius (c 250 – c 325) was an early Christian author who became an advisor to Roman emperor Constantine I, guiding his Christian religious policy in its initial stages of emergence, [1] and a tutor to his son Crispus
- Lactantius | Early Church, Latin Apologist, Roman Empire | Britannica
Lactantius was a Christian apologist and one of the most reprinted of the Latin Church Fathers, whose Divinae institutiones (“Divine Precepts”), a classically styled philosophical refutation of early-4th-century anti-Christian tracts, was the first systematic Latin account of the Christian attitude
- CHURCH FATHERS: Of the Manner in Which the Persecutors Died (Lactantius)
Behold, all the adversaries are destroyed, and tranquillity having been re-established throughout the Roman empire, the late oppressed Church arises again, and the temple of God, overthrown by the hands of the wicked, is built with more glory than before
- Lactantius - Early Christian Writings
Lactantius marks the end of the age of apologetics in the West, but his apologetics are already much more different from those of Tertullian, thus reflecting the changing times
- Who was Lactantius? - GotQuestions. org
These books are considered one of the earliest examples of Christian apologetics coming from a Latin (Roman) source Lactantius addressed issues such as God’s nature, perfection, and sovereignty He also confronted the prevailing, polytheistic views of Roman culture
- Lactantius - Classics - Oxford Bibliographies
Lucius Caelius Firmianus Lactantius (c 250– c 325 CE) was a Christian Latin author during the Diocletianic persecution and the times of Constantine the Great Lactantius was born in Africa, studied with the rhetor Arnobius in Sicca Veneria, and became a teacher of rhetoric himself
- Lactantius - Early Christianity and Patristics - Yale University . . .
Lactantius the Theologian by Anthony Coleman examines the doctrine of providence as it appears in the works of Lactantius
- EarlyChurch. org. uk: Lactantius (c. 250 -c. 325)
Lucius Caecilius Firmianus Lactantius trained as a rhetorician under Arnobius the Elder [1] He was appointed by Emperor Diocletian (c 245-313) as head of rhetoric at Nicomedia in about AD 300, which he resigned upon his conversion to Christianity
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