What does consubstantial mean in the Nicene Creed?

What does consubstantial mean in the Nicene Creed?

To say that Jesus is “consubstantial with the Father” is to say nothing other than He is of the same nature as God the Father.

When did the Catholic Mass change from Latin to English?

Catholics throughout the world worshiped in Latin until Vatican II, when the church granted permission for priests to celebrate Mass in other languages. The English translation used until this weekend was published in the early 1970s and modified in 1985.

When did the Catholic Church change the creed?

In 381, it was amended at the Second Ecumenical Council, at Constantinople (present day Istanbul, Turkey). The amended form is also referred to as the Nicene Creed, or the Niceno-Constantinopolitan Creed for disambiguation.

When did priests stop saying Mass in Latin?

The Tridentine Mass, established by Pope Pius V in 1570, was banned in 1963 by the Second Vatican Council of 1962- 65 in an effort to modernize the Roman Catholic liturgy and allow more participation and understanding of the mass by the congregation.

What is Consubstantiality Burke?

In rhetoric, “consubstantiality”, as defined by Kenneth Burke, is “a practice-related concept based on stylistic identifications and symbolic structures, which persuade and produce acceptance: an acting-together within, and defined by, a common context”.

What does begotten not created mean?

In this case, a Bishop in Laodicea named Apollinaris could not believe that the one who is “true God from true God,” “begotten not made,” could be fully God and fully a little boy. Accordingly he thought Jesus had human flesh and soul, but his mind, the Logos, was divine.

What is the difference between Roman Catholic and Latin?

Roman Catholics are Catholics in or from the local church (diocese) of Rome. (Though almost nobody uses it this way). Latin Catholics are members of the Latin Church, the largest of the 24 autonomous churches in the Catholic communion.

When did Catholic Church stop using Latin?

Latin was not meant to be fully scrapped, but it was quickly abandoned by local churches. The pontifical universities in Rome, where many future Church leaders are educated, stopped teaching in Latin in 1967. This decision eventually all but dried up the small pool of priests who could actually speak the dead language.