angelomorphic

From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
Jump to navigation Jump to search

English[edit]

Etymology[edit]

From angel +‎ -o- +‎ -morphic. First attested in the 19th century, but popularised after the 1950s on the basis of French angélomorphique as used in the work of Jean Daniélou.

Adjective[edit]

angelomorphic (not comparable)

  1. (theology) Having the form of an angel; representing a specified person or object in such a manner.
    • 2005, Matthias Reinhard Hoffmann, The Destroyer and the Lamb [], →ISBN, page 80:
      Other early Christian texts describe Christ in angelomorphic or angelic categories. For instance, in the Pseudo-Clementines Christ is ascribed the role of an archangel and becomes identified with Michael []
    • 2007, Bogdan G. Bucur, The Theophaneia School: Jewish Roots of Eastern Christian Mysticism[1], page 4:
      This larger theological articulation results in a quasi-Trinitarian structure of the divine world, featuring the Father, the Son/Spirit, and the angelomorphic Spirit.
    • 2017, Christine Hayes, “‘The Torah was not Given to Ministering Angels’: Rabbinic Aspirationalism”, in Charlotte Fonrobert et al., editors, Talmudic Transgression: Engaging the Work of Daniel Boyarin, →ISBN, page 135:
      For Fletcher-Louis the sectarian use of angelic descriptors (angelomorphic language) in reference to the high priest strongly implies an angelic transformation such that the priest is both “functionally and ontologically angelic”.