Hi Tom,
I do not have the ability to satisfy you regarding the speculations of the doctors, but I think I may have a chance at making you reevaluate the apologetic usefulness of your argument. I think you will be a little disappointed to discover how little the Church has definitivekly taught regarding God’s immutability. Even if I grant your point, the Church is not, I think you will agree, necessarily committed to its defense.
I am the one who raised the important question about what it is in the Councils that teaches that God has a kind of immutability that removes the possibility of love. The words are the teaching. And I will show that if it is a difficulty for the Catholics, it is equally a difficulty for Mormons.
First we need to examine what the Church has officially taught regarding impassibility. It is rather late in arriving on the scene, and then very briefly, without any developed explanation, with the Church already over a millenium old and the Eastern Schism having occurred.
- “We firmly believe and openly confess that there is only one true God, eternal and immense, omnipotent, unchangeable, incomprehensible, and ineffable, Father, Son, and Holy Ghost; three Persons indeed but one essense, substance, or nature absolutely simple…”
-----Lateran Council IV, Ecumenical XII, canon 1, 1215 AD, (Fordham Univ. translation)
The official teachings that follow will be of the same character.
- “We believe that this holy Trinity is not three Gods but one God, omnipotent, eternal, invisible, and unchangeable.”
-----Council of Lyons II, Ecumenical XIV, Profession of Faith of Michael Palaeologus, 1274 AD, (Denzinger’s #463) (for chronological reference, St. Thos. Aquinas died on his way to this council)
- “First, then, the holy Roman church, founded on the words of our Lord and Saviour, firmly believes, professes and preaches one true God, almighty, immutable and eternal, Father, Son and holy Spirit; one in essence, three in persons.”
-----Council of Florence, Ecumenical XVII, Session 11, 4 Feb., 1442, (EWTN website)
- “The Holy, Catholic, Apostolic and Roman Church believes and acknowledges that there is one true and living God, creator and lord of heaven and earth, almighty, eternal, immeasurable, incomprehensible, infinite in will, understanding and every perfection. Since he is one, singular, completely simple and unchangeable spiritual substance, he must be declared to be in reality and in essence, distinct from the world, supremely happy in himself and from himself, and inexpressibly loftier than anything besides himself which either exists or can be imagined.”
------Vatican Council I, Ecumenical XX, Session 3, ch. 1, 24 April, 1870, (EWTN website)
In conceding your argument, I do not disparage the great doctors and saints of Holy Mother Church who have expounded upon God’s impassibility with such rigor that you find it inconsistent with love. I am nearly certain that they correctly expIain the apostolic teaching. But even if they have corrupted the true meaning, I think you will see that the difficulty is not found in the teachings of the four councils quoted. The difficulty is only among the speculative theologians. However reliable Catholics hold them to usually be, they are fallible.
I suggest that in whatever way we reconcile God’s love with His unchangeableness in James 1:16, 17, is the way we do it with regard to the four recent councils. I am sure, accepting the Epistle of James as canonical, Latter-day Saints acknowledge a sense in which God is immutable without compromising the possibility of love. If this was the only objection you could raise toward your becoming Catholic, I could heartily encourage you to endorse a Jamesian “modified immutability”.
Following the apostolic teaching which is clearly found in James, and without necessarily endorsing the speculations of the Fathers, schoolmen, or doctors, we simply find that the Church has officially taught us what is said in Scripture about unchangeability. Whatever James meant, the Church means and it is compatible with the love of God revealed elsewhere in Holy Scripture. If philosophy is helpful to our theology that is fine, but we believe whether she is a serviceable handmaid or not.
Quote:
“Do not err, therefore, my dearest brethren. Every best gift, and every perfect gift, is from above, coming down from the Father of lights, with whom there is no change, nor shadow of alteration.”
------The Epistle of James 1:16, 17
Rory