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As you should know by now, not every word from every Church Father, Saint or not, is seen as necessarily expressing the Catholic Faith. This is especially true of those ante-Nicene Fathers who did not have the language of the Council to express the Faith they received from the Apostles and the bishops they appointed. Since the JW’s only originated out of the mind of “Pastor” Russell, trying to compare his errors which were formative to your organization to the errors or imprecisions of any of the early Church Fathers which were not formative, is a fool’s errand.The Greek word for “doctrine” is “teaching.” Justin Martyr taught that the Son was not the Creator, only the Father was the creator. He also taught that the Father could not have been on the earth, but only the Son because the Father was so much greater.
Do Catholics teach this today?
But further, your paraphrasing empties the substance right out of St. Justin’s words. Justin rightly makes the distinction between the Father and His only-begotten Son and the fact that it was the Son Who became Incarnate, not the Father. Your problem arises in your not understanding Trinitarian doctrine (and thus Justin Martyr) because you compare unbegotten with “only-begotten” and see that one must refer only to God and the other to a creature of God, though His highest creature. Orthodox Christianity recognizes that the Father is unbegotten and the Son is the only-begotten and that His being begotten is an infinite and eternal begetting. This is explained well by Bl. Columba Marmion:
"The Father, the fullness of all life, begets a Son. From the Father and the Son, as from one Source only, proceeds the Spirit of Love. All these have the same eternity, the same infinity of perfection, the same wisdom, the same power, the same holiness - because the divine nature is one, only, for the three Persons.
Further (and as I already said to you), in the Apostles’ Creed, the Father is named Creator as the First Person of the Holy Trinity: “we believe in one God, the Father Almighty, Creator of Heaven and earth, and in Jesus Christ, His only Son, Our Lord. . .”“But each Person possesses exclusive properties - those of ‘being Father,’ ‘being Son,’ ‘proceeding from the Father and the Son’ - which establish the ineffable relations between themselves and distinguish them from each other. There is an order of origin, without there being any priority of time, or any hierarchical superiority, or any relation of dependence.,” Christ in His Mysteries, pgs. 45-46.
It was fitting, then, as Justin implicitly says, that the Son, through whom all things were made become Incarnate to accomplish our redemption, precisely because all things are made through Him. This fittingness continues for Justin because he see that it was the Son Who prepared His own way in revealing Himself as “I AM” to Moses and His preparation of His People through His encounters with Abraham.198 Our profession of faith begins with God, for God is the First and the Last,1 the beginning and the end of everything. The Credo begins with God the Father, for the Father is the first divine person of the Most Holy Trinity; our Creed begins with the creation of heaven and earth, for creation is the beginning and the foundation of all God’s works. Catechism of the Catholic Church
These words of St. Justin to Trypho could aptly be said to you, Dan:
But if you knew, Trypho, who He is that is called at one time the Angel of great counsel, and a Man by Ezekiel, and like the Son of man by Daniel, and a Child by Isaiah, and Christ and God to be worshipped by David, and Christ and a Stone by many, and Wisdom by Solomon, and Joseph and Judah and a Star by Moses, and the East by Zechariah, and the Suffering One and Jacob and Israel by Isaiah again, and a Rod, and Flower, and Corner-Stone, and Son of God, you would not have blasphemed Him who has now come, and been born, and suffered, and ascended to heaven; who shall also come again, and then your twelve tribes shall mourn. For if you had understood what has been written by the prophets, you would not have denied that He was God, Son of the only, unbegotten, unutterable God. Dialogue, #126