B
Betterave
Guest
That still could very easily lead to confusion I think. I think it would be better to say that He died in his humanity. Humanity is an abstract term referring to human nature. Humanity, as such, does not die; human beings die. He chose to unite His divine nature to a human nature and to undergo what humans undergo, including death. This union of the divine nature with human nature is not a mixing of the human and divine natures, however; the divine nature does not take on human nature as a part of itself as a result of the Incarnation. That is impossible.I know that it sounds a little bit strange:
Isn’t this what it means though? You say ‘Jesus is God’ and that he ‘died’ on the cross but then when it is asked ‘Did God die’ you say[if you agree with tonyrey’s words] ‘no, it was His humanity that died’ so I asked, then since His ‘humanity died’, didn’t a part of Him die as well?