Five Major Competing Christologies

Christian Origins

From Bart Ehrman’s post Early Christian Docetism, September 28, 2015.

From the surviving documents of the period, there appear to have been five major competing Christologies (= understandings of who Christ was) throughout the Christian church, and I will devote a post or two to each of the first four. 

  1. Docetism, the subject of this post, understood Christ to be a fully divine being and therefore not human; [He provides a concise short insert about Marcion and what his followers believed. VERY good.]
  2. Adoptionism understood him to be a fully human being and not actually divine;
  3. Separationism understood him to be two distinct beings, one human (the man Jesus) and the other divine (the divine Christ);
  4. Modalism understood him to be God the Father become flesh.  
  5. The fifth view is the one the “won out,” the Proto-orthodox view that:
    • Christ was both human and divine, at one and the same time,
    • that he was nonetheless one person and not two persons, and
    • that he was distinct from God the Father, both of them being God but there being only one God.