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Nine_Two
Guest
This came up in a thread requesting that the term “Nestorian” be banned. I don’t want to derail that thread from its stated purpose. But I’ve always found the Christological position of the churches commonly called “Nestorian” to be quite confusing.
ronyodish:
A simplification of the Nestorian position, but it works well enough for our purposes. But the position you give as the Assyrian position, how would that differ from monophysitism or miaphysitism (I understand the distinction between these two positions, but your own description is a bit too vague to work out how it is distinguished from either one). If you hold to a miaphysite position what distinguishes you from the Oriental Orthodox? They seem uncomfortable with your Christology.Nestorian Christology is the confession of two Persons, two Sons, and two Subjects. Assyrian Christology confesses one Son, one Person, and one Subject.
As you say, that goes as far as Catholicism is concerned - and this is a Catholic forum so the point is quite a good one, I won’t argue against it, but I’m curious if this is the case why do the Assyrian Churches hold Nestorius, who is held as a heresiarch by the rest of Christianity, in such high esteem? If you’ve truly rejected the Christology he taught, why hold him in that position? This would be a bit like we Eastern Orthodox disagreed with the Christology of St. Basil the Great, or the Oriental Orthodox disagreed with the Christology of St. Athenasius. It doesn’t make sense to me.In the past, the term Nestorian was used to denigrate the Assyrians and count them among the heretics. Since the Common Christological Declaration, the Assyrian Christology has been clarified and found to be orthodox, at least among Catholics. Therefore, the term Nestorian should no longer be used towards the Assyrians, because the connotations associated with this term are no longer applicable.