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Fr_Kyrillos
Guest
I would simply respond by saying that the above indicates that one has not really studied the Christology of St. Severus. I don’t see an actual quote by St. Severus. For a nice two-part article providing a very clear overview of St. Severus, I would recommend read Fr. Peter Farrington’s articles found here:My Miaphysite friends, what do you make of this in the Catholic encyclopedia under “Monophysitism” :
" In speaking of one activity, one will, one knowledge in Christ, Severus was reducing Monophysitism to pure heresy just as much as did the Niobites or the Tritheists whom he certainly held in horror; for he refused to distinguish between the human faculties of Christ—activity, will, intellect—and the Divine Nature itself. This is not Apollinarianism, but is so like it that the distinction is theoretical rather than real. It is the direct consequence of the use of Apollinarian formulae. St. Cyril did not go so far; and in this Monothelite error we may see the essence of the heresy of the Monophysites; for all fell into this snare, except the Tritheists, since it was the logical result of their mistaken point of view. "
SO the refusal to cknowledge two physis ina single hypostasis results in the inability to say whether the human activity or divine activity is at work. And apollinaris of Laodicea said that the Word replaced the Soul in Christ, and all activities were merely the activities of God clothed in flesh.
THis is a salient point. How would Miaphysites respond to this?
orthodoxunity.org/article02.php
orthodoxunity.org/article03.php
Again, it is clear in all the writings of the non-chalcedonian fathers that there is a real confession of the consubstantiality of Christ’s humanity to ours. If one takes the position that there is no physis without hypostasis, then how can one say Christ has two physis without having two hypostases? We come back to the problem of language and especially the word physis.
In Christ,
Fr. Kyrillos