O
Oscarthecat
Guest
I’m sure this has come up before, but couldn’t find posts on it-
Mark 13:31-32 states “Heaven and earth will pass away, but my words will not pass away. But of that day or hour, no one knows, neither the angels in heaven, nor the Son, but only the Father.”
I know that this verse has been discussed at length throughout Christian history, but I’m looking for which explanation is definitively upheld by the Church. However, I can’t understand how the Church explains that Christ was Omniscient, but then Christ Himself say that there is something God knows that He does not know.
Some of the answers I’ve already been told, but that seem a little inadequate to me, are :
“well, Jesus just meant that it wasn’t for them to know”-if that was the case, He would have said that.
“Jesus knew but didn’t tell us that He knew because…” any end of this sentence means Jesus mislead us, which obviously isn’t true.
“Jesus didn’t know that yet, but knew it later”- wrong, because the Church is clear that Jesus’ knowledge didn’t increase-He was infused with Divine knowledge from the moment of the incarnation. the only type of knowledge he could gain was experiential knowledge, or knowledge gained through the process of human reason, but which He would have already had knowledge of by virtue of His divinity. Something like the difference between knowing and doing, but not.
So…
Here’s what I can come up with, using my very limited understanding of Thomas Aquinas treatment of Jesus’ human and divine knowledge. I feel like this explanation comes just a little too close to nestorianism, which divided Christ into two separate persons, but it’s the best I’ve been able to muster thus far:
Christ’s human nature was infused by the Word with divine knowledge of creation, both actual and potential, from the first moment of the Incarnation. However, this could not include infinite knowledge of things that exist only in God’s infinite potential, because Aquinas believed that such knowledge was completely beyond a human being’s understanding.
Therefore, although Christ’s human nature does have complete knowledge of all that exists and has the potential to exist in creation, knowledge of God’s full potential is outside the ability of Christ’s human nature to understand by reason alone because no created thing can understand the infinite potential of God, even though this knowledge is fully understood by the person of Christ.
Using Aquinas’ logic, the problem wasn’t that Christ doesn’t know when because He is not referring to an historical event. The event when “Heaven and Earth will pass away” (Mark 13:30) is the end of creation, and therefore exists only in the divine knowledge of potentialities. If the conditions determining when the end of the world will occur exist exclusively in God’s knowledge of potentiality, then Christ’s statement that “"But of that day or hour, no one knows, neither the angels in heaven, nor the Son, but only the Father” is consistent with the fact that Christ, in both His human and divine natures, was omniscient at the moment of that statement, to the extent possible for each nature.
Hopefully, it is pretty clear where I’m falling into error on this. Christ obviously wasn’t lying when He said that something was known only to God and not the Son, but at the same time, Christ was omniscient and so there couldn’t have been things that God knew that Jesus didn’t. I can’t seem to reconcile this without pointing to some condition of His human nature that would make Him both divinely omniscient and subject to human limitation at the same time. However, the Church is also clear that He was not limited in His humanity, but instead that His humanity was elevated by His divinity.
Any help on this would be greatly appreciated-
Mark 13:31-32 states “Heaven and earth will pass away, but my words will not pass away. But of that day or hour, no one knows, neither the angels in heaven, nor the Son, but only the Father.”
I know that this verse has been discussed at length throughout Christian history, but I’m looking for which explanation is definitively upheld by the Church. However, I can’t understand how the Church explains that Christ was Omniscient, but then Christ Himself say that there is something God knows that He does not know.
Some of the answers I’ve already been told, but that seem a little inadequate to me, are :
“well, Jesus just meant that it wasn’t for them to know”-if that was the case, He would have said that.
“Jesus knew but didn’t tell us that He knew because…” any end of this sentence means Jesus mislead us, which obviously isn’t true.
“Jesus didn’t know that yet, but knew it later”- wrong, because the Church is clear that Jesus’ knowledge didn’t increase-He was infused with Divine knowledge from the moment of the incarnation. the only type of knowledge he could gain was experiential knowledge, or knowledge gained through the process of human reason, but which He would have already had knowledge of by virtue of His divinity. Something like the difference between knowing and doing, but not.
So…
Here’s what I can come up with, using my very limited understanding of Thomas Aquinas treatment of Jesus’ human and divine knowledge. I feel like this explanation comes just a little too close to nestorianism, which divided Christ into two separate persons, but it’s the best I’ve been able to muster thus far:
Christ’s human nature was infused by the Word with divine knowledge of creation, both actual and potential, from the first moment of the Incarnation. However, this could not include infinite knowledge of things that exist only in God’s infinite potential, because Aquinas believed that such knowledge was completely beyond a human being’s understanding.
Therefore, although Christ’s human nature does have complete knowledge of all that exists and has the potential to exist in creation, knowledge of God’s full potential is outside the ability of Christ’s human nature to understand by reason alone because no created thing can understand the infinite potential of God, even though this knowledge is fully understood by the person of Christ.
Using Aquinas’ logic, the problem wasn’t that Christ doesn’t know when because He is not referring to an historical event. The event when “Heaven and Earth will pass away” (Mark 13:30) is the end of creation, and therefore exists only in the divine knowledge of potentialities. If the conditions determining when the end of the world will occur exist exclusively in God’s knowledge of potentiality, then Christ’s statement that “"But of that day or hour, no one knows, neither the angels in heaven, nor the Son, but only the Father” is consistent with the fact that Christ, in both His human and divine natures, was omniscient at the moment of that statement, to the extent possible for each nature.
Hopefully, it is pretty clear where I’m falling into error on this. Christ obviously wasn’t lying when He said that something was known only to God and not the Son, but at the same time, Christ was omniscient and so there couldn’t have been things that God knew that Jesus didn’t. I can’t seem to reconcile this without pointing to some condition of His human nature that would make Him both divinely omniscient and subject to human limitation at the same time. However, the Church is also clear that He was not limited in His humanity, but instead that His humanity was elevated by His divinity.
Any help on this would be greatly appreciated-