TOmNossor;14150004:
I will say that if LW7 is not trying to say that Jesus prayed for the apostles to become “consubstantial” like His Father and He are “consubstantial” I cannot make sense of what LW7 is saying. Look at his summary here:
forums.catholic-questions.org/showpost.php?p=14148953&postcount=353
Nobody on this thread may be able to define “consubstantial,” but I am pretty sure there is no definition that voids Jane’s point.
Hi TOmNossor, Which are the verses of the passage and what is your interpretation or belief about them?
Thank you in advance.
Hello again.
I will tell you what I see in the summary offered on this post. You can tell me what I misunderstand about this summary. I think that will show what I am saying well enough (but you need to read LW7’s summary of the conversation).
Jane suggest that in John 17:21 we have a piece of Biblical text that can help us know HOW God the Father and God the Son are one. I will say that I know of no other text in the Bible that lends itself as well to answer HOW God the Father and God the Son are ONE than this scripture.
Jesus in what is called the “High Priestly prayer” says:
John 17:21 KJV: That they all may be one; as thou, Father, art in me, and I in thee, that they also may be one in us: that the world may believe that thou hast sent me.
She asks then, “Are we to be one with the Father through co-substantiation. That doesn’t make any sense.”
LW7 does not reply to the spirit of her question which IMO is quite obvious. He sees that she has used the term “co-substantiation” which of course is not the word “consubstantiation.” I have no idea what point he wants to make, but he suggests that if Jane doesn’t understand what “co-substantiation” or “consubstantiation” (to LW7’s credit he does not seem to fixated on the incorrect term like other posters) then of course it will not make sense. He asks her to define the word.
So, you have suggested that “consubstantial” means “same nature.” Alcstr understands what you say to mean “like: same species.”
I have offered something I have learned from Protestant and/or Catholic scholars that ONE meaning of Homoousian (Consubstantial) is “of one substance in the generic sense.” This “generic” sense is the sense all Catholic scholars take when claiming that Christ is consubstantial with mankind. It is reasonably explained as “same species.” (even though Stephen168 says that “Nobody said species.”) But, the high priestly prayer doesn’t work with this meaning.
“That they (the disciples) may be one (species) as thou, Father, art in me and I in thee, that they also may be one (species)”
The disciples are already one species. If the oneness of Father and Son is consubstantial in this meaning then it makes no sense for Christ to ask that the disciples become one (with themselves concerning their species) when they are already one with themselves concerning their species.
Now, you personally have not mentioned this, but there is a 2nd meaning scholars recognize for homoousian. It is called homoousian in the “numeric” sense. Most Christian scholars I have read who deal with this demand that the Father and the Son are homoousian in the “numerically one in substance” not “generically one in substance.”
So, if we use homoousian in the numeric sense, we have.
“That they (the disciples) may be one (numerically in substance, a single being) as thou, Father, art in me and I in thee, that they also may be one (numerically in substance, a single being)”
I think this is a particularly difficult read here.
The third sense of homoousian was specifically denied (by Constantine interestingly enough).
So, I suggest that you can say “co-substantiation” and have little understanding of the nuance of this word homoousian and still know that John 17:21 militates against believing that the Father and the Son are one due to their homoousian. And I further suggest that insisting on a thorough exploration of the definition of the word homoousian is a distraction from Jane’s point which was quite good.
Hope that makes sense.
Let me say that I do not believe complexity equals falsity. I do believe that Catholicism DEVELOPED into positions that are unlikely to be what original Christianity believed. The idea that the Fathers at Chalcedon meant,
“Christ is homoousian (in the numeric sense) with God the Father in His divinity, and Christ is homoousian (in the generic sense) with mankind in His humanity” IMO makes the Chalcedon Fathers either jokesters or schizophrenic and I think they were neither.
Similarly the exchange formula: “Christ become what we are so that we might become what He is.” Is interpreted in a way that makes Irenaeus either a jokester of schizophrenic. Discussed by Catholic scholar Daniel Keating.
IMO these are both symptoms of a radical creator/creature dichotomy that DEVELOPED in early Christianity. It is IMO quite possible to adequately elevate and respect Christ and His divinity without defining divinity as that which is totally and completely incompatible with humanity. God’s absolute immutability is another development in these areas discussed by Eastern Orthodox scholar Jaroslav Pelikan.
I see fingerprints in many places, but perhaps I see wrongly.
Charity, TOm