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GaryTaylor
Guest
Lot of good points as usual with you; “On the other hand, if you insist on the filioque exactly on the basis of the consubstantiality of the Father and the Son while still insisting that the Spirit does not share in the begetting of the Son.”My Master’s thesis was not on the Trinity per se, but it did incorporate Trinitarian theology.
First of all, there is not an entirely adequate answer to these questions for the reason that the Trinity is the greatest of all mysteries that remains eternally impenetrable. However, I will attempt to address the matter to the extent I am able.
I think it is a mistake to conflate the matter of the consubstantiality of the divine hypostases with the matter of the relationships among them. In my opinion, when one does so, it ultimately leads to the obliteration of the doctrine of the Trinity by leading to any one of several positions that are incompatible with Christian teaching. I’ll discuss three.
If one were to say that the Father alone cannot be without cause because to say so means that the three are not one, then the monarchy of the Father is destroyed. This is unacceptable, because the tradition is unanimous in maintaining the monarchy of the Father.
Another potential problem with conflating consubstantiality with the relations among the divine hypostases is that of reducing the Trinity to a monad by destroying any differentiation among the relations. In other words, once you insist that the consubstantiality of the three means that both the Father and the Son must share in the spiration of the Spirit, then, on the basis of that same consubstantiality one also should say that the Father and the Spirit must share in the begetting of the Son (a heresy), and that the Son and the Spirit somehow must share in the “unbegetting” (a heresy as well as an impossible absurdity as I’m sure you can see) of the Father. Such a construction a (setting aside the absurdity in how the Son and Spirit could somehow share in generating the Father, who alone is ungenerate) of insisting on each of the possible pairs from among the three divine hypostases sharing in the generation of the third hypostasis exactly on the basis of consubstantiality seems to me to obliterate any real distinction among the relations.
Next, if one says that the filioque must be true [exactly because of the teaching of consubstantiality while not admitting the heretical position of the Spirit sharing in the begetting of the Son, then ultimately, one faces the problem of subordinationism. If the Son–exactly because of his consubstantiality with the Father–must share in the spiration of the Spirit, then how is the Spirit, who does not share in the begetting of the Son, also consubstantial with the Father? One could conclude that the Spirit is not consubstantial with the Father (a heresy), which reduces the Spirit either to a lesser divinity, or a creature. On the other hand, if you insist on the filioque exactly on the basis of the consubstantiality of the Father and the Son while still insisting that the Spirit does not share in the begetting of the Son (and rightly so), but that the Spirit is also consubstantial with the Father (again, rightly so), one then could say that the Spirit is somehow “more consubstantial” with the Father than the Son, which is absurd and heretically reduces the Son to a lesser divinity than the Father and the Spirit.
Finally, as I’ve stated in the past, it is not my intent to deny the filioque. I am Catholic and I accept the filioque as an authoritative teaching of the Church. However, I oppose explanations of the filioque that insist that the filioque is necessitated exactly on the basis of the consubstantiality of the Father with the Son, because of all of the potential problems I see.
Depends how we this see imho, In regards to the Word became flesh. The Holy spirit is proceeding from the Father through the Son and Second person thus is Incarnate through the power of the Holy Spirit. The opposition in person is only in understanding how God the Father remained God and became man. For its not a different God which became man than the only one which ever existed. Nor can a different God be by His power conceived by flesh, be born of flesh and then be a different God. Thus the admission of the Holy Spirit proceeding of one principle, namely the only God there is-God, which in this the first principle of the Trinity. So in the Incarnation the Father through the Son thus the Father and Son are sending the Holy Spirit, who then if we can agree the Second person Trinity is the Incarnate Word of God. The fact we say the Son is begotten eternally without time only resolves at the Father-Son, Holy Spirit confession of faith even to reduce “and the Holy Spirit” to proper equally, all existing eternally and without cause of the One Principle of the monarchy the Father. In fact even in typology and scripture the Kingdom given to the Son by the Father returns to the Father so it inverted. Which goes out in creation and returns in the completed Kingdom of the second person trinity and returns to God the Father.
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