Category
page 1God in Christianity

Jesus
theodicy
thumb|Gottfried Leibniz coined the term theodicy to justify God's existence in light of the apparent imperfections of the world.
God the Son
in Christianity, the second person of the Trinity, begotten by God the Father, incarnated as Jesus Christ
God is dead
statement by German philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche
God in Christianity
Christian conception of God
God the Holy Spirit
in trinitarian Christianity, the third person of the Trinity, that proceeds from the Father (and the Son, depending on the branch of Christianity); often depicted as a dove in iconography
Glory
manifestation of God's presence according to the Abrahamic religions
The hidden God
Christian idea of the fundamental unknowability of the essence of God
God in Mormonism
god in Mormonism
Book of Nature
religious and philosophical concept
open theism
theological movement within evangelical and post-evangelical Protestant Christianity, stating that, due to God’s and humans’ free will, God's knowledge is dynamic (“open”); His providence, flexible; the future, a plurality of branching possibilities
names of God in Christianity
names and titles that refer to the Christian God
accommodation
theological principle
Godhead in Christianity
the substantial essence or nature of the Christian God

Heaven and Hell
book by Emanuel Swedenborg
God the Father in Western art
aspect of history
Agnoetae
The Agnoetae (Greek ἀγνοηταί agnoetai, from ἀγνοέω agnoeo, to be ignorant of) or Themistians were a Monophysite Christian sect of Late Antiquity that maintained that the nature of Jesus Christ was like other men's in all respects, including limited knowledge despite being divine.