D
dronald
Guest
So were these just separate theories and one prevailed in Egypt while a separate prevailed in Rome? Or were they both rooted in tradition, yet one was wrong? Or did the tradition of one of the Church’s change?And you are blaming oral tradition because? It appears you are set to discredit tradition from the onset.
This is much complicated subject and you need to look into history.
You can look at Nestorianism first. Which was condemned at the Council of Ephesus (431AD). Nestorianism placed a strong emphasis on the division of Christ’s divine and human nature - so much that they presented Christ as 2 persons (This is very simplified and open to correction).
What Jeremy quoted above is Cyril of Alexandria (Major oponent of Nestorianism).
From Nestorianism we see another extreme: Eutychianism - Where it presented that Christ’s divinity consumes his humanity (This is very simplified and open to correction).
Eutychianism was condemned at the Council of Chalcedon (451AD).
What I understand the Orientals to hold is Miaphysitism. Miaphysitism holds that in the one person of Jesus Christ, Divinity and Humanity are united in one or single nature (“physis”), the two being united without separation, without confusion, and without alteration. (Jeremy can expand on this much better than I can and correct if my understanding is wrong).
We understand that they are lacking in fullness because they separated from the Church at the time (Chalcedon). That’s why Jeremy calls us (Catholics) and the EO - Chalcedonians.