R
Razanir
Guest
I just used this one on another threadFather = fire
Son = light begotten from the fire
Holy Spirit = heat that proceeds from the fire.
There was never a time when the fire had no light or heat.
I just used this one on another threadFather = fire
Son = light begotten from the fire
Holy Spirit = heat that proceeds from the fire.
There was never a time when the fire had no light or heat.
Awesome!I just used this one on another thread
Unfortunately, though, the thread was later deleted for being spamAwesome!I am glad that you have found it helpful.
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It happens.Unfortunately, though, the thread was later deleted for being spam![]()
Except, when have you ever seen a fire without heat or light? Just as a fire cannot exist without heat or light, so the Son and the Holy Spirit are just as natural and important as the Father. The only problem I immediately notice is that it leaves out the filioque.My understanding is that the fire/heat/light analogy is an example of Arian heresy where two parts were created by the first and aren’t one in nature with that part.
I might agree on the fire/heat/light comment, maybe, but again this is about Analogies,My understanding is that the fire/heat/light analogy is an example of Arian heresy
where two parts were created by the first and aren’t one in nature with that part.
My understanding is that the three leaf clover analogy and the egg analogy are
examples of partialism, where each is a part of God but not wholely God them-
selves.
The analogy of fire, heat, and light is patristic.My understanding is that the fire/heat/light analogy is an example of Arian heresy where two parts were created by the first and aren’t one in nature with that part.
okay, I said “maybe” I’ll buy the fire thing being Arian, now I don’t, thank you for clarifying.The analogy of fire, heat, and light is patristic.
I also think the familial union is a good analogy. Another one I like is the musical chord, where you have three distinct notes but when played together they produce one harmonious sound.Matrimony.
Marriage and family life are divine institutions which mirror the Trinity and have the Trinity as a model for how it should properly function.
God the Father loves God the Son perfectly, holding nothing back. God the Son loves God the Father perfectly, holding nothing back. The fruit of that love is the Holy Spirit. The word ***spirit ***in latin is spiritus which means breath. The breath of God, the heavy breathing betweek God the Father and God the Son is the Spirit.
We profess this in the creed at every Mass.
I believe in the Holy Spirit, the Lord, the Giver of Life, who proceedes from the Father and the Son.
Marriage is the same. The fruit of the love between husband and wife is children, the result of their “heavy breathing”.
Matrimony is more than just an analogy for the Trinity. It is a participation in the divine life of the Trinity. Family life is Trinitarian life - sacrifice, putting God first, active love, justice, mercy, being “naked and without shame”, etc.
-Tim-
It is more than an analogy. It is a participation in Trinitarian love. It is a participation in the life of the Trinity. It is the most perfect model of the Trinity here on earth.I also think the familial union is a good analogy. Another one I like is the musical chord, where you have three distinct notes but when played together they produce one harmonious sound.
It is another way in which we were made in the image of God: Eve from Adam in a state of mutual love.It is more than an analogy. It is a participation in Trinitarian love. It is a participation in the life of the Trinity. It is the most perfect model of the Trinity here on earth.
-Tim-
No offense intended but this is not a sound analogy. The Holy Spirit would be two spirits because of the two breaths or he would be one spirit from the mixture of two breaths. The Council of Florence says that there is only one spiration/breath.God the Father loves God the Son perfectly, holding nothing back. God the Son loves God the Father perfectly, holding nothing back. The fruit of that love is the Holy Spirit. The word ***spirit ***in latin is spiritus which means breath. The breath of God, the heavy breathing betweek God the Father and God the Son is the Spirit.
We profess this in the creed at every Mass.
I believe in the Holy Spirit, the Lord, the Giver of Life, who proceedes from the Father and the Son.
Marriage is the same. The fruit of the love between husband and wife is children, the result of their “heavy breathing”.
No offense taken. The analogy is imperfect.No offense intended but this is not a sound analogy. The Holy Spirit would be two spirits because of the two breaths or he would be one spirit from the mixture of two breaths. The Council of Florence says that there is only one spiration/breath.
“The Latins asserted that they say the holy Spirit proceeds from the Father and the Son not with the intention of excluding the Father from being the source and principle of all deity, that is of the Son and of the holy Spirit, nor to imply that the Son does not receive from the Father, because the holy Spirit proceeds from the Son, nor that they posit two principles or two spirations [breaths]; but they assert that there is only one principle and a single spiration [breath] of the holy Spirit, as they have asserted hitherto. Since, then, one and the same meaning resulted from all this, they unanimously agreed and consented to the following holy and God-pleasing union, in the same sense and with one mind.”
Source: papalencyclicals.net/Councils/ecum17.htm
- The Council of Florence, Session 6 (6 July 1439)
Mixing this with human marriage would imply that there was a time when the Holy Spirit did not exist since there is a time before the two lovers produced a child. The Holy Spirit is not begotten of the Father and the Son but, rather, he proceeds from the Father and the Son. St Augustine of Hippo taught against this:
“For the Father alone is not from another, and therefore He alone is called unbegotten, not indeed in the Scriptures, but in the usage of disputants, who employ such language as they can on so great a subject. And the Son is begotten of the Father; and the Holy Spirit proceeds from the Father principally, the Father giving the procession without any interval of time, yet in common from Both [Father Son]. But He [the Spirit] would be called the Son of the Father and of the Son, if – a thing abhorrent to the feeling of all sound minds – Both had begotten Him. Therefore the Spirit of Both is not begotten of Both, but proceeds from Both.” (On the Trinity, xv; 26)