T
thinkandmull
Guest
The Spirit is the Love between the Father and Son so they each have a relation to it.
Q 40, 1, 1:
Thus, common spiration is the same as the person of the Father, and the person of the Son; not that it is one self-subsisting person; but that as there is one essence in the two persons
Everything of the essence is personal, so common spiration is personal “as the person of the father, and the person of the Son”, as he says. So doesn’t this contradict him when he says “it is not called a property, because it does not belong to only one person; nor is it a personal relation”.
I don’t know why Aquinas spoke of a combined relation that is not personal. There is nothing impersonal in God!
Doesn’t the below involve a direct contradiction as well?
Q 28, 4:
The relation of the principle of this procession is called spiration; and the relation of the person proceeding **is called **procession: although these two names belong to the processions or origins themselves, and not to the relations.
Q 40, 1, 1:
Thus, common spiration is the same as the person of the Father, and the person of the Son; not that it is one self-subsisting person; but that as there is one essence in the two persons
Everything of the essence is personal, so common spiration is personal “as the person of the father, and the person of the Son”, as he says. So doesn’t this contradict him when he says “it is not called a property, because it does not belong to only one person; nor is it a personal relation”.
I don’t know why Aquinas spoke of a combined relation that is not personal. There is nothing impersonal in God!
Doesn’t the below involve a direct contradiction as well?
Q 28, 4:
The relation of the principle of this procession is called spiration; and the relation of the person proceeding **is called **procession: although these two names belong to the processions or origins themselves, and not to the relations.