kâinatın nizam

listen to the pronunciation of kâinatın nizam
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logos
In Presocratic philosophy, the principle governing the cosmos. Among the Sophists, the topics of rational argument. In Stoicism, the active, material, rational principle of the cosmos
The creative word of God, which is itself God and incarnate in Christ
plural form of logo
The divine Word; Christ
(Gr "word") A symbol for Christ, the word incarnate, or "word made Flesh: ' which is also called "the Word of God" (cf John, 1: 1-4) Lord's Prayer The prayer taught by Christ in the Sermon on the Mount (cf Matt 6: 9-33 and Luke 11: 2-4) It begins with the phrase "Our father " and is the most common Orthodox prayer
Greek In debate, appealing to reason, a sense of logic
word, reason, plan; divine reason as the source of order in the world
(Gr "word") A symbol for Christ, the word incarnate, or "word made Flesh: ' which is also called "the Word of God" (cf John, 1: 1-4)
which is the appeal of the evidence or the reasoning process, involves finding good reasons, often expressed in because-clauses, for an argument Students may benefit from a brief review of the section in Chapter 2 that covers purpose as a link between actual and ideal situations before considering good reasons in logos
the impersonal, discriminating factor that characterizes male psychology and a woman's animus See Eros
a Greek word meaning intelligence, wisdom, God, spirit, fire, and order The Apostle John identified Jesus as the Logos in The Gospel of John
In Presocratic philosophy, the principle governing the cosmos ; Among the Sophists, the topics of rational argument ; In Stoicism, the active, material, rational principle of the cosmos
A form of rhetoric in which the writer or speaker uses logic as the main argument
God The Cosmic Being Who ensouls a planet (Planetary Logos), a solar system (Solar Logos), a galaxy (Galactic Logos) and so on to infinity
Recommended CCACC logos to use on Official Pages OR on Unofficial Pages only as a link to the CCACC Home Page
(Greek: "word," "reason," "plan") In Greek philosophy and theology, the divine reason that orders the cosmos and gives it form and meaning. The concept is found in the writings of Heracleitus (6th century BC) and in Persian, Indian, and Egyptian philosophical and theological systems as well. It is particularly significant in Christian theology, where it is used to describe the role of Jesus as the principle of God active in the creation and ordering of the cosmos and in the revelation of the divine plan of salvation. This is most clearly stated in the Gospel of John the Apostle, which identifies Christ as the Word (Logos) made flesh
A word; reason; speech
The word of God, which itself has creative power; a hypostasis associated with divine wisdom
"word, language, discourse; reason, argument; an account, etc " One of the most polysemous (i e , having many meanings) words in the Greek language Used of the pre-existent Christ in John 1
kâinatın nizam
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