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Gabriel_of_12
Guest
The CCC 246-255 places the Catholic Faith in a pure perspective that never has any of these declarations problematic nor isolated from one another to draw a false conclusion or misinterpretation.You are ignoring all the “dogmatic” declarations in the Western Church that added glosses on the clause itself. As Seraphim said, the clause itself is capable of an orthodox understanding, but these declarations, at Lateran IV, Lyons II, and Florence, that the Spirit eternally proceeds from the Father and the Son equallyas from one principle, are not. This is where the real problem lies.
Wandile, provided us with great post’s describing the filioque discussions and controversies earlier in the Church +. The arguments for debate you introduce today, you relate to councils that come later. These are not ignored, but can be summed up from the CCC 238-267, if anyone would like to really learn what the CCC teaches about the filioque, without a misrepresentation.
The CCC sums it best, how the Apostolic Faith is expressed from the filioque when professed within the Nicene Creed, which St. Hilary teaches from antiquity.
I think St. Hilary gives a great introduction to the filioque that supports the CCC today; “When the advocate has come whom I will send you from the Father, the Spirit of Truth who proceeds from the Father, He will bear witness of me” (Jn.15:26). “The advocate will come and the Son will send Him from the Father”
The CCC agrees with St. Hilary, because St. Hilary does not apply rigidity to the filioque here; “He who sends manifests His power in that which He sends”…( The Father distinctly sends because he is the source; the Son distinct from the Father also sends with His power the Father gives the Son)…“Nor will I infringe upon anyone’s liberty of thought in this matter, whether they may regard the Paraclete Spirit as coming from the Father or from the Son”…. (St. Hilary adds Jn. 16:12-15)…
“Many things yet I have to say to you, but when the Paraclete comes He will reveal them to you”, “Consequently (the Spirit) he receives from the Son who has been sent by Him and who proceeds from the Father”. St. Hilary asked the question? “Whether it is the same to receive from the Son as to proceed from the Father?”…“We shall have to admit that it is the One and the Same, to receive from the Son as it is to receive from the Father”.…(parenthesis mine).
The Holy Spirit eternally proceeds from the Father and the Son from one principle through one Spiration in Love.
St. Augustine; “But only the Spirit of the Father and of the Son all are co-equal. The Spirit from the divine economy is the same Spirit that proceeds from the Father and of the Son. The Holy Spirit proceeds from the one who begets and from the one who is begotten of the Father. There can be no division from what is co-equal in what is Consubstantial, this substance of the divine all three persons being one God. Yet it is from the distinct persons from the economy divine which reveals the Holy Spirit eternally proceeds from the Father and the Son”.
The filioque debate has views and opinions pro and con from afar long before the filiqoue enters the creed in the West.
The filioque is not necessarily the reason for the schism, once the Latin Catholic faith expression is respected and realized that the filioque never changes or adds to the Apostolic faith, but only confirms Jesus is God incarnate.
Jesus the Word of God helps us reflect the mystery of the Trinity and the filioque expressed within the Nicene Creed.
John 13:20 "Truly, truly I say to you, he who receives anyone whom I send receives me; and he who receives me, receives Him who sent me"
If? One falsely Interprets the filioque outside of what is already professed within the Nicene Creed loses the Latin Expression of the Apostolic faith.
Authority appears to be the stumbling block of the schism, the filioque when viewed from antiquity, becomes an excuse to react to political circumstances of power in the early Church.
Peace be with you