Lucifer Calaritanus

Lucifer Calaritanus (unknown - 371) a bishop of Cagliari, Sardinia, was a fierce opponent of Arianism, which followed the Alexandrian presbyter Arius in teaching that Christ is not truly divine but a created being. To further his rigorously orthodox views, Lucifer of Cagliari founded the Luciferians, a sect that survived in scattered remnants into the early 5th century. In its turn, this sect was attacked by Jerome in his polemic Altercatio Luciferiani et orthodoxi ("Altercation of the Luciferian and the orthodox"), which offers almost all that is known of Lucifer or the sect. His date of birth and the history of his youth are not known, but he must have been born early in the fourth century. His name demonstrates that "Lucifer" (meaning "light-bringer") was not yet merely a synonym of "Satan" in the 4th century. Hasty references by enthusiastic 19th century biblical scholars assumed from the name that the Luciferians were Satanists.

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
leap second
luca pacioli
lower mainland
lucius afranius (poet)
london post office railway
lulach of scotland
laparoscopic surgery
lexicography
la style lindy hop
libido
larissa
lead and follow (dance)
lexeme
lightworks
love parade
lost generation
left wing politics
lutheranism
los angeles class submarine
lucretia
lightweight directory access protocol
linux kernel
lart (disambiguation)
latina
latino
latin america
lynx (web browser)
lynx programming language
l'hpital's rule
lexicology
lake abitibi
ligature
lansing, michigan
leukemia
length
louis ginzberg
left arm unorthodox spin
list of newspapers
louis ix of france
linear b
larousse gastronomique
louis xiv of france
ludwig von kchel
leo computer