apocatastasis

Etymology
From, from , from , from + , from  +.

Noun

 * 1)  Restoration, renovation, reestablishment, particularly:
 * 2)  An apocalypse leading to the remaking of the world rather than a Final Judgment,  an Origenist doctrine condemned by the 543.
 * 3) * 1885, Philip Schaff translating the anathemas confirmed by the 553 Second Ecumenical Council in The Nicene and Post-Nicene Fathers:
 * If anyone shall say that all reasonable beings will one day be united in one, when the hypostases as well as the numbers and the bodies shall have disappeared,... moreover, that in this pretended apocatastasis, spirits only will continue to exist... let him be anathema.
 * A Tradition...concerning the Apocatastasis of the World...partly by Inundation and partly by Conflagration.
 * 1)  The doctrine that all souls will enter heaven or paradise,  an Origenist doctrine condemned by the 543  Synod of Constantinople.
 * 2) * 1867, R.E. Wallis translating F.J. Delitzsch, A system of Biblical psychology, VII 552:
 * No doctrine...contradicts the Holy Scripture in a more unwarrantable manner than that of the so-called Apokatastasis.
 * 1)  Return to an earlier condition.
 * 2)  Return to the same apparent position, as after a revolution.
 * 1)  Return to an earlier condition.
 * 2)  Return to the same apparent position, as after a revolution.
 * 1)  Return to the same apparent position, as after a revolution.
 * 1)  Return to the same apparent position, as after a revolution.
 * 1)  Return to the same apparent position, as after a revolution.

Translations

 * Arabic: اِسْتِعَادَة كُلِّيَّة
 * Greek:
 * Irish: apacatastáis
 * Polish:
 * Portuguese: apocatástase
 * Russian: апоката́стасис