C
Cavaradossi
Guest
From Blachernae:Dear brother in Christ Cavaradossi,
Yes, I am aware of the anathemas of Blarchanae, but none of them touch upon the actual teaching of the Latin Church (can’t say for sure about Beccus). There is a definite train of thought pervading the anathemas that the Son is called “cause” in the sense that He is Source. But that is not what the Latin Church teaches about filioque. The Latins unequivocally teach that only the Father is Source. Note well that Blarchanae condemns the idea that the Son is cause of the Holy Spirit’s Essence. But it is obvious that the Synod was equating “cause” with the idea of “Source.” The Latins indeed teach that the Son is cause of the Holy Spirit’s Essence (but not His hypostasis), but what the Latins do not teach is that the Son is the Source or a Source of the Holy Spirit’s Essence. Only the Father is Source according to the Latins.
The Eastern Romans were not stupid. They knew quite plainly that they were denying that the Son had any sort of causality regarding the existence of the Spirit.To the same, who teach that the Father and the Son—not as two principles and two causes—share in the causality of the Spirit, and that the Son is as much a participant with the Father as is implied in the preposition “through.” According to the distinction and strength of these prepositions they introduce a distinction in the Spirit’s cause, with the result that sometimes they believe and say that the Father is cause, and sometimes the son. This being so, they introduce a plurality and a multitude of causes in the procession of the Spirit, even though this was prohibited on countless occasions. As such, we pronounce the above-recorded resolution and judgment, we cut them off from the membership of the Orthodox, and we banish them from the flock of the Church of God.
If your interpretation of Palamas is true, that is where I, as an apostolic Christian of the Oriental Tradition (not as a defender of the Latin Tradition), would disagree. The idea that there can be a distinction between “internal” and “external” IN ETERNITY (i.e., a distinction of “internal” and “external” IN THE GODHEAD) is unknown to the Oriental Tradition (and, I contend, to the early Fathers). God is simple in Himself and the only distinction that the Fathers speak of in the Godhead is the distinction of Persons, nothing else.
The internal/external language is simply a gloss which explains the meaning of Gregory II and Gregory Palamas, who are using language (essence, energy, hypostasis), which has no meaning to modern human beings. When Gregory II, for example, distinguishes between the manifestation of the Holy Spirit from the Father through the Son and the immediate procession of the Spirit from the Father alone, he says that the Spirit’s having existence as a being, an hypostasis, can only be from the Father, but that the Spirit’s existence, can be manifest through the Son, insofar as He shines forth from the Son. What this means is that on the level of trinitarian existence, the Spirit only has his person from the Father, but that the energies are manifest through the Son.Besides, this distinction of “internal” vs. “external” is not even found in Blarchanae (or Palamas, I gather (?)). This is a development in modern EO’xy. This is why I stated in my earlier post that the rhetoric of certain quarters of EO’xy today does not reflect the concerns of her forbears.
This is what Gregory II alludes to when he writes:
Here, he is showing that it is absurd not to distinguish between the essence and energy (supporting himself with a quote from St. Athanasius, explaining Pentecost). The argument being that if we came to know God in essence, then the Holy Spirit coming down during Pentecost would have been an incarnation or adoption. Likewise, it would mean that when Christ breathed on the Apostles, that he was giving them the essence of God. Surely these conclusions are absurd, which is why it must be true that the energies are different from the essence of God. From our perspective, this does indeed signal a distinction between the ‘internal’ and incommunicable life of God, as opposed to the ‘external’ and communicable life of God.If this enhypostasized essence of the Paraclete is both gift and energy, do we—who partake of the gift and for whom the gift and illumination operate3share and receive the essence? And, what truth is there in him who says that the divine is participable alone in its energies and illumination? As regards what St. Athanasius says—that the coming down of the Holy Spirit is realized in the energies and divine power—what value will that have? None, I believe—if you are right!