Yes, but do they mean (again, as defined by your Church in their Council of Florence) that such procession is eternally from both, or is it more like HG Bishop Youssef explained it in the link I shared earlier? And note, by the way, that HG affirmed the temporal procession as outlined in John, yet we do not accept the filioque. The authors of the Creed apparently did not see the need to explain that the procession of the Holy Spirit is through the Son (maybe because the Gospel already explains what this means), and the article on the Holy Spirit was expanded to defend and explain His divinity to those who thought that He was not divine. In that context, do you think it would have been more important to explain His temporal procession in minute detail, or to affirm that He is of the same divine origin as the Son, which is to say, His ultimate source is from the Father alone?
CCC 246: Council of Florence in 1438 explains: “The Holy Spirit is eternally from Father and Son; He has his nature and subsistence at once (simul) from the Father and the Son. He proceeds eternally from both as from one principle and through one spiration… And, since the Father has through generation given to the only-begotten Son everything that belongs to the Father, except being Father, the Son has also eternally from the Father, from whom he is eternally born, that the Holy Spirit proceeds from the Son.”
In the filioque we speak of the eternal procession. Maybe its because I am a Chalcedonian it makes sense to me. The Council of Florence, to me, explains the consubstantial communion of the Father and Son how the Holy Spirit proceeds. Where we agree that the Holy Spirit proceeds from the Father, where we disagree is the alone part. I think to say the Father alone, is to separate - eternally - the consubstantial communion of the Father and the Son - which I would think would be heresy.
Have you though the reason the filioque was added was because it was needed for the Western Christians?
Also what of this quote by - a Coptic theologian - Didymus the Blind?
“Of mine he shall receive.” (Quoting John 16:15) Just as we have understood discussions, therefore, about the incorporeal natures, so too it is now to be recognized that the Holy Spirit receives from the Son that which He was of His own nature, and not as one substance giving and another receiving, but as signifying one substance.
So too the Son is said to receive from the Father the very things given Him by the Father, nor has the Holy Spirit any other substance than that given Him by the Son. And on that account we do affirm those propositions according to which we believe that in the Trinity the nature of the Holy Spirit is the same as that of the Father and the Son.
Because it doesn’t say that.
You say it doesn’t, but could you list for me three ways it does not?
And sorry for not getting back sooner, I was at the hospital yesterday.