C
chrisb
Guest
How was this ‘lawfully and reasonably added’? If the ‘imminent necessity’ is passed why not simply remove it and return the Creed to it’s original form? I mean you, as Catholics, are willing to completely change your entire Liturgical Traditions for the sake of appeasing Protestants but you won’t return the Creed to it’s original form… Why?I. Council of Lyons (1274)
i. Declaration Concerning the Procession of the Holy Spirit
In faithful and devout profession we declare that the Holy Spirit proceeds eternally from the Father and the Son, not as from two beginnings, but from one beginning, not from two breathings but from one breathing…
ii. Profession of Faith of Michael Palaeologus
…We believe also that the Holy Spirit is complete and perfect and true God, proceeding from the Father and the Son, coequal and cosubstantial, co-omnipotent, and coeternal through all things with the Father and the Son. We believe that this Holy Trinity is not three Gods but one God, omnipotent, eternal, invisible, and unchangeable.
(Note: "This profession of faith was proposed in the year 1267 by Clement IV to Michael Palaeologus and by him offered at the Council of Lyons to Gregory X, and was also proposed again by Urban IV on Aug 1, 1385 to the orthodox Greeks returning to the Church.)
II. Council of Florence (1438-1445)
Decree for the Greeks (From the Bull “Laetentur coeli”, July 6, 1439)
[The procession of the Holy Spirit] In the name of the Holy Trinity, of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit, with the approbation of this holy general Council of Florence we define that this truth of faith be believed and accepted by all Christians, and that all likewise profess that the Holy Spirit is eternally from the Father and the Son and has His essence and His subsistent being both from the Father and the Son, and proceeds from both eternally as from one principle and one spiration; we declare that what the holy Doctors and Fathers say, namely, that the Holy Spirit proceeds from the Father through the Son, tends to this meaning, that by this it is signified that the Son also is the cause, according to the Greeks, and according to the Latins, the principle of the subsistence of the Holy Spirit, as is the Father also. And that all things, which are the Father’s, the Father Himself has given in begetting His only begotten Son; without being Father, the Son Himself possesses this from the Father, that the Holy Spirit proceeds from the Son from whom He was moreover eternally begotten. We define in addition that the explanation of the words “Filioque” for the sake of declaring the truth and also because of imminent necessity has been lawfully and reasonably added to the Creed.
(Denzinger 460, 463, 691)