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grannymh
Guest
When we start with the “hypostasis” one Person, there is no change because the one Person Jesus Christ continues to be the Second Person of the Most Holy Trinity. This Person’s nature is super-natural, that is, Divine.Of course you don’t.
Unlike Granny and others I am critiquing your limited philosophic frame of reference and refusing to operate within it because to do so would be to accept your limited framework.
But instead of lifting your head up and seeing a bigger framework you more doggedly look to the ground and effectively keep saying “what do you think of my proof that bumble bees cannot fly”.
If I were to assist Granny I would suggest change is appropriately predicated of Jesus’s divine “hypostasis” but not of His Divine nature.
But “hypostasis” is so difficult a philosophic concept that I don’t think anyone here is capable of maintaining a coherent discussion on this myself included.
Bahman, I recommend Balthasar’s Cosmic Liturgy vol one (preceded by at least a Bachelors in Scholastic Philosophy) if you really want to pursue this angle that works even within your very narrow frame of reference.
When we begin with one Divine Person, we therefore have one Divine Nature for that one Person. The theological or common sense question is --Can the one Divine Person add a lower level nature to His Person. Being Divine is being all powerful. Therefore, we can say that the Second Person of the Most Holy Trinity has the power of adding a lower level nature to His Person. We need to keep in mind that human nature is on a lower level than the Divine nature. Human nature is not the same as Divine Nature. Nor does it have the power of Divine Nature.
The way to solve the difficulty is to insist on the word assume. The Catholic Church uses the word assume and not absorb. Check out the difference.
Being on a lower level that is not divine, there is no way human nature has power over the Divine Nature. Nor has the human nature the power to alter Divine Nature. Nor has the human nature power over the Divine Person. Therefore, the status of one Divine Person with a Divine Nature remains intact.
Assuming a human nature is simply adding or taking on an additional, yet lower, nature. Assuming a human nature works because the one Divine Person has the power to do this. Therefore, the Incarnation is a valid concept which did take place.
There is a change in mathematics going from 1 to 2 natures. But this addition, 1 +1 equals 2 does not have the power to change the Divine Person into something else. Nor does mathematics have the power to change either Divine Nature or human nature into something else. Neither can mathematics destroy Divine Nature or human nature.
This demonstration focuses on the power source. Once that is firmly established with a Divine Person being in charge, then it is possible to reason that assuming the human nature does not involve substantial changes in God, the Second Person of the Most Holy Trinity.
Going from 1 to 2 is simply an explanation without power.