S
Schism_hater
Guest
These are some thoughts I recently wrote down regarding this issue. My purpose in posting this is so that we can be clear on where the present positions came from, and the rationale behind them. this will have to be in two parts.
A preamble: I contend that the “Filioque” problem is not so much the clause itself, although I believe it should not have been added without the consent of the entire Church( but I do not wish to discuss this issue now). While misleading, I believe it is capable of an orthodox interpretation. Famously, St. Maximus the Confessor gave it an orthodox interpretation in the 600s. I believe the problem is with the later western theology that developed around it.
Although the theology on the procession of Spirit from the Father and the Son was first set forth in some detail by St. Augustine, it was St. Anselm of Canterbury who first undertook to systematically defend it (undoubtably in response to the widening schism with the “Greeks”; Anselm wrote shortly after 1054). He laid the basic groundwork of the theology, which was expounded on (but I would argue not significantly further developed, and certainly not inconsistently with Anselm) by Aquinas, and was dogmatized, in its various aspects, by the councils of Lateran IV, Lyons II, and Florence (note that Lateran IV, in 1215, was directly after Anselm and before Aquinas). Thus, I think it may be fairly said that it was Anselm more than any other Catholic theologian who developed the theology behind the doctrine. He deals systematically with this doctrine in De Processione Spiritus Sancti.
I will try to make this short and sweet. St. Anselm’s basic rationale and motivation for the “double procession” (as it is commonly known) is as follows (very briefly summarized): the Persons of the Trinity are distinguished by their relations (I don’t wish to discuss this aspect here). The Father is unoriginate, and the Son originates from the Father. Therefore, to uniquely distinguish the Spirit, it must originate from the Father and the Son. It’s pretty simple in its essence.
In order to avoid the undesirable conclusion that the Spirit proceeds from two sources, Anselm makes it clear that, in this theology, the Spirit proceeds from the Father and Son together. This was later dogmatized in the west as the Spirit proceeding (eternally) from the Father and Son “as from one principle”. The problem comes in when Anselm describes this one principle further. For him, it is the Father and the Son together. And he makes it clear that, for him, the Father and the Son together are “God”. Of course, in other places he refers to each of the Persons as “God”, which is perfectly orthodox, but Anselm specifically refers to the Father and Son (considered apart from the Holy Spirit) as God. Here is a representative (and I would argue, the central) passage (emphases are mine throughout):
But if the Greeks say that the Holy Spirit cannot be from two causes or two sources, we answer that, as we do not believe that the Holy Spirit is such by reason of which the Father and the Son are two, but from that by which they are one, so we do not say that there are two sources of the Spirit, but that there is one source… Therefore, the Father and the Son and the Holy Spirit, although each is the source of creatures, are none the less not three sources but one. Just so, the Holy Spirit, when we say that He is from the Father and the Son, is not from two sources but one, which is the Father and the Sonas the Spirit is from God, who is Father and Son…” DPSS, 10, I.
I would encourage everyone reading this to read De Processione Spiritus Sancti, or at least chapters 9 and 10, to see that I have quoted Anselm accurately and fairly here.
A scholarly commentary, in summarizing Anslem’s argument here, writes: “Anselm replies [to the Greek argument against two sources] in accordance with his standard formula: the Holy Spirit does not exist from the Father and the Son insofar as they are different persons but insofar as they are one God”. Jasper Hopkins, A Companion to the Study of St. Anselm (University of Minnesota, 1972), p. 118.
A preamble: I contend that the “Filioque” problem is not so much the clause itself, although I believe it should not have been added without the consent of the entire Church( but I do not wish to discuss this issue now). While misleading, I believe it is capable of an orthodox interpretation. Famously, St. Maximus the Confessor gave it an orthodox interpretation in the 600s. I believe the problem is with the later western theology that developed around it.
Although the theology on the procession of Spirit from the Father and the Son was first set forth in some detail by St. Augustine, it was St. Anselm of Canterbury who first undertook to systematically defend it (undoubtably in response to the widening schism with the “Greeks”; Anselm wrote shortly after 1054). He laid the basic groundwork of the theology, which was expounded on (but I would argue not significantly further developed, and certainly not inconsistently with Anselm) by Aquinas, and was dogmatized, in its various aspects, by the councils of Lateran IV, Lyons II, and Florence (note that Lateran IV, in 1215, was directly after Anselm and before Aquinas). Thus, I think it may be fairly said that it was Anselm more than any other Catholic theologian who developed the theology behind the doctrine. He deals systematically with this doctrine in De Processione Spiritus Sancti.
I will try to make this short and sweet. St. Anselm’s basic rationale and motivation for the “double procession” (as it is commonly known) is as follows (very briefly summarized): the Persons of the Trinity are distinguished by their relations (I don’t wish to discuss this aspect here). The Father is unoriginate, and the Son originates from the Father. Therefore, to uniquely distinguish the Spirit, it must originate from the Father and the Son. It’s pretty simple in its essence.
In order to avoid the undesirable conclusion that the Spirit proceeds from two sources, Anselm makes it clear that, in this theology, the Spirit proceeds from the Father and Son together. This was later dogmatized in the west as the Spirit proceeding (eternally) from the Father and Son “as from one principle”. The problem comes in when Anselm describes this one principle further. For him, it is the Father and the Son together. And he makes it clear that, for him, the Father and the Son together are “God”. Of course, in other places he refers to each of the Persons as “God”, which is perfectly orthodox, but Anselm specifically refers to the Father and Son (considered apart from the Holy Spirit) as God. Here is a representative (and I would argue, the central) passage (emphases are mine throughout):
But if the Greeks say that the Holy Spirit cannot be from two causes or two sources, we answer that, as we do not believe that the Holy Spirit is such by reason of which the Father and the Son are two, but from that by which they are one, so we do not say that there are two sources of the Spirit, but that there is one source… Therefore, the Father and the Son and the Holy Spirit, although each is the source of creatures, are none the less not three sources but one. Just so, the Holy Spirit, when we say that He is from the Father and the Son, is not from two sources but one, which is the Father and the Sonas the Spirit is from God, who is Father and Son…” DPSS, 10, I.
I would encourage everyone reading this to read De Processione Spiritus Sancti, or at least chapters 9 and 10, to see that I have quoted Anselm accurately and fairly here.
A scholarly commentary, in summarizing Anslem’s argument here, writes: “Anselm replies [to the Greek argument against two sources] in accordance with his standard formula: the Holy Spirit does not exist from the Father and the Son insofar as they are different persons but insofar as they are one God”. Jasper Hopkins, A Companion to the Study of St. Anselm (University of Minnesota, 1972), p. 118.